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Espoo

Espoo (/ˈɛsp/,[8] Finnish: [ˈespoː]; Swedish: Esbo[c]) is a city and municipality in the region of Uusimaa in the Republic of Finland. It is located on the northern shore of the Gulf of Finland, bordering the cities of Helsinki, Vantaa, Kirkkonummi, Vihti and Nurmijärvi while surrounding the enclaved town of Kauniainen. The city covers 528.03 square kilometres (203.9 sq mi)[9] with a population of about 300,000 residents in 2022,[10] making it the 2nd-most populous city in Finland.[4][9] Espoo forms a major part of a substantially larger metropolitan area known as Greater Helsinki, home to over 1.5 million people in 2020.[11]

Espoo
Esbo
City of Espoo
Espoon kaupunki
Esbo stad
Location within Finland
OpenStreetMap
Interactive map outlining Espoo.[a]
Coordinates: 60°12′20″N 024°39′20″E / 60.20556°N 24.65556°E / 60.20556; 24.65556Coordinates: 60°12′20″N 024°39′20″E / 60.20556°N 24.65556°E / 60.20556; 24.65556
Country Finland
Region Uusimaa
Sub-regionGreater Helsinki
Founded (parish)1458[b]
Market town1963
Incorporated (city)1 January 1972
Government
 • City managerJukka Mäkelä
Area
 (2018-01-01)[3]
 • Total528.03 km2 (203.87 sq mi)
 • Land312.26 km2 (120.56 sq mi)
 • Water215.88 km2 (83.35 sq mi)
 • Rank230th largest in Finland
Population
 (2021-12-31)[4]
 • Total297,354
 • Rank2nd largest in Finland
 • Density952.26/km2 (2,466.3/sq mi)
Population by native language
 • Finnish83.6% (official)
 • Swedish8.3%
 • Others8%
Population by age
 • 0 to 1418.7%
 • 15 to 6466.2%
 • 65 or older15%
Time zoneUTC+02:00 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+03:00 (EEST)
Municipal tax rate[7]18%
ClimateDfb
Websitewww.espoo.fi

Espoo was first settled in the Prehistoric Era, with the first signs of human settlements going back as far as 8,000 years,[2] but the population effectively disappeared in the early stages of the Iron Age.[12] In the Early Middle Ages, the area was resettled by Tavastians and Southwestern Finns.[13] After the Northern Crusades, Swedish settlers started migrating to the coastal areas of present-day Finland, and Espoo was established as a self-governing Catholic parish in the 15th century. In the aftermath of the Finnish War, the establishment of Helsinki as the new capital of the Russian-controlled Grand Duchy of Finland in 1812 greatly benefited the development of the municipality. However, the area remained largely agrarian, until the 20th century. Espoo experienced rapid urbanization and major demographic changes in the decades following World War II, with Finnish superseding Swedish as the language of the majority around 1950. The municipality became a market town in 1963 and gained city status in 1972.[2]

The cityscape is dominated by detached housing and suburban environment,[9] and the city itself is known for its large natural areas, including its long shoreline—58 kilometres in total[9]—and archipelago, forests, lakes and a national park.[14] Administratively, the city is divided into seven major districts, and each major district is further divided into smaller districts and neighbourhoods.[15] Espoo has no traditional city centre; instead, it has five distinct city centres—Leppävaara, Tapiola, Matinkylä, Espoon keskus and Espoonlahti—and numerous local centres, many of which are formed around historical manors.[9][16]

Aalto University is based in Otaniemi, Espoo, along with a thriving science community that includes numerous startups and organizations such as VTT – the Technical Research Center of Finland. Several major companies are based in Espoo, including Nokia, HMD Global, Tieto, KONE, Neste, Fortum, Orion Corporation, Outokumpu, and Foreca, as well as video game developers Rovio and Remedy Entertainment. Espoo joined the UNESCO Global Network of Learning Cities in 2015.

History

Etymology

Before the time of the Swedish colonization, Espoo was inhabited by Tavastians, a Finnish tribe, and the area in which the city lies on did most likely have a different name. The name of Espoo is believed to have derived from the Medieval Swedish village of Espaby (or Espoby), which was located in the western part of the present-day city. It may refer to aspens that grew on a nearby riverbank, as the archaic Swedish word for the tree is "äspe", and the word for a river is "å", with the suffix "-by" meaning village.[2][17]

The coat of arms of Espoo features a gold horseshoe topped by a gold crown on a blue shield. The crown refers to the old kungsgård of Espoo and the horseshoe refers to the obligation to transport officials, military or prisoners that parishes along the King's Road fell under. Many roads in Espoo still follow the old medieval King's Road. The King's Road in Finland, stretching from Turku in the west to Vyborg in the east, was formed in the 1340s or 1350s and was the most important road in Finland at the time.[18]

Prehistory

Present-day Espoo was first settled by hunter-gatherers around 8,000 years ago, a few thousand years after the end of the Last Glacial Period. Stone Age settlements have been found from Nuuksio and Perinki.[19] Settlements from the Early Metal Age have been found from Mikkelä[20] and from Morby dating from the Pre-Roman Iron Age, of which the latter is an important subject relating to research of cattle husbandry.[21]: 133  Traces of early settlement in the area remain in the place names. For example, the original name for Soukka was Soukko.[22]

The first settlers lived in the northern parts of the current city, around the lakes Pitkäjärvi, Bodomjärvi, and Loojärvi, as the southern parts were still largely covered by the sea. In the Stone Age, people in Espoo lived on south-facing shores and slopes, as they provided shelter from cold continental winds. Living close to water bodies also made hunting and fishing easier. The way of life was dictated by seasonal changes, and people rarely stayed in one place throughout the year.[2]

During the Bronze Age (c. 1500–500 BCE), human settlement shifted southward. Known settlements from the era are few, but more than 70 cairn-like burial sites from the period have been discovered, mostly from southern Espoo, which formed an archipelago at the time. When ironwork was introduced to Finland around 500 BCE, it gave people access to materials that were far more versatile than materials used before. However, the climate grew colder at the beginning of the Iron Age,[2] and it seems that human settlement in Espoo disappeared during the era.[12] Only two discoveries from the time have been made in Espoo.[2]

Swedish rule

Medieval Espoo

 
Evangelical Lutheran Cathedral in Espoo, originally built as a Catholic parish church in the 1480s.[1]

Most of the original villages of present-day Espoo were founded by Tavastian Finns according to place names. By the 12th century, there were Tavastian houses on the shore of Kaukjärvi (now known as Pitkäjärvi), in Kauklahti, Karvasmäki, Bemböle, Haapalahti and Finnevik.[13]

The first Swedish settlements in Uusimaa were established during the 12th or 13th century.[19] Swedish settlers moved to the area through the current site of Kirkkonummi, and then to the Esboby area. From there, they continued northeast to Kauklahti, Bemböle and Vanhakartano. In later stages, settlers might also have arrived in Espoo directly from Sweden, most likely from Svealand. The Swedish name for Espoo, Esbo, dates from this period. The settlers changed the Finnish names used by the Tavastians to Swedish ones: for example Kauklahti became Köklax and Karvasmäki became Karvasbacka. The current Finnish names might also have changed from the original ones in this process. For example, the place name Välli might have been changed into Vällskog, which has since led to the current Finnish name Velskola.[13] The Swedish settlements were so extensive that the entire area became Swedish-speaking, except for its northernmost part and possibly the Haapalahti-Mäkkylä area.[13]: 147–148 

Palynological analyses indicate that agriculture was already practised in Espoo around the 11th century, but no historical records from the era survive.[2] Until the late 13th century, Espoo was part of a borderland region between the Southwestern Finns and Tavastian Finns. Some artefacts found in Espoo have also been traced to ancient Savo-Karelian Finnish costumes, and the Late Iron Age and Early Medieval women in the area have had similar jewellery as in the region around present-day Mikkeli.[21]: 300–301 

In the Middle Ages, there were about 70 village lots in Espoo. Ancient fields and many passageways have been discovered near the remains of ancient villages.[19] Espaby (at which site the Espoo manor was later founded) was probably the oldest Swedish-speaking village in the area. The name Espoo likely refers to the name of the river Espoonjoki (Swedish: Esboån, originally Espå / Espåå), which in turn is thought to have come from the aspen trees on the shores of the river (the Swedish word for "aspen" is äspe). The name was first mentioned in 1431. Originally, the current river Gumbölenjoki was renamed Espoonjoki after the village located along the river. When a church was founded near the village of Södrik, the name Espoonjoki was given to a river running from lake Kirkkojärvi to Kauklahti.[23]

Espoo became an independent parish in the 15th century. Previously Espoo had been a chapel parish under Kirkkonummi. The stone Espoo Cathedral was built in the 1480s by initiative from the peasants. Up to the 1670s the eastern parts of Espoo belonged to the Helsinki parish, after which they were officially annexed to the Espoo parish and the slottslän of Raseborg.[19]

After the Second Crusade to Finland, settlers from Sweden established permanent agricultural settlements in Uusimaa. Espoo was a subdivision of the Kirkkonummi congregation until 1486–1487. The oldest known document referring to Kirkkonummi is from 1330; Espoo as a subchapter has been dated to the 1380s, although the first document directly referring to Espoo is from as late as 1431. The construction of the Espoo Cathedral, the oldest preserved building in Espoo, marks the independence of Espoo. Administratively, Espoo was a part of Uusimaa. When the province was split to Eastern and Western provinces governed from the Porvoo and Raseborg castles, respectively, the eastern border of the Raseborg province was in Espoo. The 13th-century road connecting the most important cities in Finland at that time, the King's Road, passes through Espoo on its way from Stockholm via Turku and Porvoo to Viipuri.

Gräsa manor

The oldest frälse stead in Espoo, the Gräsa manor, apparently received frälse rights in the late 15th century.[24] Gräsa is one of the oldest settlements in Espoo and the oldest in southern Espoo, as it was probably founded already in the early 14th century as Swedish settlement moved inland. From the beginning, the settlement was located at the site of the current Olari Church on both sides of the Gräsanoja river. The absence of Finnish names in the area reveals that the population was Swedish-speaking from the beginning.[24]

Early modern period

 
The Royal Manor in Espoo, founded by King Gustav I of Sweden in 1556. The current mansion was completed in 1797 and expanded in 1914.[25]

In 1556, King Gustav Vasa decided to stabilize and develop the region by founding a royal mansion in Espoo. The government bought the villages of Espåby and Mankby (Finnish: Mankki) and transferred the population elsewhere, and built the royal mansion in Espåby. (Mankby was eventually abandoned and was never repopulated.) The royal mansion housed the king's local plenipotentiary (vogt), and collected royal tax in kind paid by labour on the mansion's farm. The administrative centre Espoon keskus has grown around the church and the Espoo railway station, but the municipality has retained a network-like structure to the modern day.

In the 16th century Espoo changed into a parish of many large farmsteads. The war between Sweden and Russia in the late 16th century attracted farmstead owners to found horse steads in hopes of reduced taxation. Horse stead owners were required to uphold a rider in the wars fought by the realm. In the late 17th century the crown had donated lands to noblemen with success in wars, and during a few decades, the lands in Espoo had been dealt to seven noble families.[19]

In the early 18th century the Great Northern War and the Great Wrath caused poverty among the people. During this time, many members of the estates in Espoo moved to Sweden. The foundation of Sveaborg in front of Helsinki increased the traffic in Espoo and many officers bought villas in Espoo. Construction of the fortress required transport of bricks from factories in Espoo. In the same century, agricultural novelties such as the potato and various fruits spread from the manor houses to the peasants.[19]

Russian rule and early industrialization

 
The Neo-Renaissance Alberga Manor, built by the Russian industrialist Feodor Kiseleff in the 1870s.[26]

The Swedish rule in Finland came to an end in 1809, when the Kingdom of Sweden ceded all of its remaining territory in Finland to the Russian Empire after the Finnish War.[27] When the city of Helsinki became the capital of the newly established Grand Duchy of Finland in 1812, it brought novel developments to the neighbouring parish of Espoo. Many government officials as well as members of the growing merchant class bought summer houses from Espoo.[2]

 
Russian military map showing southeastern parts of Espoo some time between 1870 and 1907.

There was a great sawmill in Bastvik back in 1883, where great ships from faraway seas came to lade lumber. There were many great bridges so that vessels could be laden simultaneously. After bringing colonial and other necessary goods to Helsinki, they came empty to Bastvik. [...] The superintendent was a German-born Hoffeldt.

Katri Bergholm, reminiscing life in Bastvik, present-day Saunalahti, at the end of the 19th century.[28]

Throughout the 19th century, most of Espoo's inhabitants worked in agriculture. The population was around 4,000, while most of the people lived in over 60 small villages. Halfway through the century, almost 90% of the population spoke Swedish as their first language. The wealthy estates and mansions of the parish required maids, farmhands and tenant farmers as their workforce to raise cattle, farm crops and raise vegetables in the kitchen gardens. Fishing was also common in the coastal areas. The Glims farmstead in Karvasmäki has been preserved as a museum to present rural life in Espoo during this period when industrial development was still minute in Finland.[2]

The rural community in Espoo began to change in the latter half of the 19th century. Some brickyards had already been built in the 18th century on the grounds of Espoonkartano manor, located in the western part of the present-day city, but it was not until the economic reforms of Emperor Alexander II that the Industrial Revolution started to gain momentum in Finland. As the Russo-Finnish trade legislation liberalized, new brickyards were established in Espoonlahti and Kauklahti, as the shores of Espoo Bay provided high-quality clay for their use. The bricks were mostly carried with steamboats to the neighbouring Helsinki, the growing capital city of the grand duchy.[2]

The most prominent industrial facility in 19th century Espoo was the steam-powered Bastvik Sawmill, founded in 1876.[28] In addition to the growing lumber and brick industries, a joiners' workshop was established on the island of Staffan in 1886.[2][29] Staffan Island became a home for a highly skilled and renowned community of joiners, colloquially known as the "University of Espoo"[2] or the "University of Soukka".[29]

World War I

 
Military commanders of Germany during World War I: Paul von Hindenburg, emperor Wilhelm II and Erich Ludendorff.

World War I had an effect on the Russian Empire and the Grand Duchy of Finland when the German Empire declared war on Russia on 1 August 1914.[30] Russia immediately started preparing for war against Germany. At the start of the war, the main forces of the Russian Baltic Fleet had been concentrated at Sveaborg in front of Helsinki.[31] The Russian military feared that Germany would use southern Finland to attack Petrograd, so Russia started building a fortification chain of over 20 kilometres surrounding Helsinki to protect it.[19][31][32]: 16  Construction of the fortification started in 1915 and took almost three years.

Construction of the fortification chain required a huge amount of workforce. The construction was led by the engineering administration of Saint Petersburg, but in practice, the actual work was led by the engineering military staff in Sveaborg. The local engineering office was located in Leppävaara in Espoo.[32]: 17  Although the Russian military tried to keep the construction of the fortification chain secret from the enemy, there are German intelligence reports with descriptions of the Russian fortification chain.[32]: 19 

Because of the lack of available workforce, the Russians turned to expropriation allowed by Russian military law. The manor houses in Espoo were ordered to send one man and one horse each to work on the construction. The total number of workforce at the fortification is not known, but the expropriation resulted in 4000 men, of which 1300 were situated in Leppävaara and 1500 in Tapiola in June 1916.[32]: 17 

16-year-old Annukka Koskinen who lived at the Bergans farm in Suur-Leppävaara wrote about the expropriation in June 1916:[32]: 19 

It was really shameless. Last year [the Russians] took control of three large buildings, and they would have taken the last one too, had we not complained to the office of the governor. For all of summer, they built fortifications all over the hill. Trees were cut down and new ones planted in their place. You know that only very few of these newly planted trees will survive. -- This spring, [the soldiers] have shot at our fields during practice. Two days ago we received an order that the house, the large woodshed and the sauna have to be empty by noon on the next day.

The Russian Revolution in 1917 stopped work at the fortification.[19][32]: 20  Finland became independent in December 1917, and the fortifications were never actually needed to protect Saint Petersburg from a German attack. The fortifications only ever saw action in one battle during the Finnish Civil War, when the red forces in Leppävaara fought the German forces who had come to the aid of the whites on 14 April 1918. The fortifications were later used as ammunition storage and civil protection during World War II.[32]: 20 

Finnish Civil War

Power vacuum

 
German soldiers in Leppävaara in 1918.

After the February Revolution in 1917, Finland went through a power vacuum. The imperial rule had fallen, general order had broken and the police had been dispensed.[32]: 9, 44  Upholding the general order moved to a local level, and local militias, citizens' guards, fire brigades and security forces were founded. These forces were not originally founded for military purposes but to uphold the general order. The activity was voluntary-based, and the forces were organised for example during strikes.[32]: 44 

In autumn 1917 the nature of the organisation became more military and the number of local workers' guards increased rapidly. The armed organisation was influenced by an acute lack of food, disappointment with the loss of the majority position of the Social Democratic Party of Finland at the 1917 Finnish parliamentary election, the Senate's desire for renovation, the fight for municipal power and fear of an armed uprising of the bourgeoisie.[32]: 44 

Red and White Guards in Espoo

In Espoo, particularly Leppävaara was a restless area. The workers' association of Alberga founded an unarmed militia of ten people to uphold the general order. During summer and early autumn in 1917 there were local conflicts between the bourgeois guards and the workers' militia. In middle November the guards in Espoo on both sides had already started arming themselves.

In July 1917 the first bourgeois order guard was founded in Kauklahti, under the guise of a voluntary fire brigade. A little later a similar organisation was founded in Kilo, and these organisations joined forces in August to September.[32]: 56  The guards had about 160 members in total at this point.[32]: 57 

After the Finnish Civil War had broken out, many young men left Espoo to join the White Guards all over the countryside in Uusimaa. The most important of these was the Sigurds Guard in Kirkkonummi, of whose members 40 came from Espoo.[32]: 48 

Red Espoo

At the start of the Civil War in January 1918, the Red Guards took control of Espoo. There were no actual battles between the Reds and the Whites during the revolution, as Espoo was in practice already under Red control.[32]: 57  Municipal power was transferred from the municipal council and the municipal board to a social democratic municipal organisation. The Reds took control without bloodshed and strengthened their position by sending patrols all around Espoo to confiscate any weapons found in the houses they visited.[32]: 45 

By order from the Finnish People's Delegation, a revolutionary court was founded in Espoo, with the Kauklahti-based worker Aleksi Aronen serving as its judge. The court sessions were held in Villa Odenwald in Kauniainen. Most of the sentences given by the court were prison sentences or fines. In addition, the Red Guard in Leppävaara had its own comrade court. The general staff of the Red Guard in Uusimaa had installed a curfew forbidding going outside after nine o'clock in the evening. Meetings were held in workers' houses assembling lists to provide support for the Red Guards. Patrols consisting of young men looking for food and weapons could take justice in their own hands in the typical form of red terror.[32]: 46  In the spring, the Reds killed nine people in Espoo, of which six were civilians. Rumours of these acts of violence spread out, spreading fear among the people. Many people saw the municipal rule of the Reds as a reign of terror.[32]: 47 

During the Civil War, many bourgeois people in Espoo, whom the Reds in power saw as a threat, fled to neighbouring municipalities, hidden cabins in the archipelago or forests in northern Espoo. For example, Hans Heimbürger, the speaker of the Espoo municipal council, fled to Degerö in Inkoo in January together with his family. Two people from Espoo are said to have fled into caves to flee from the Red power.[32]: 58 

After the war

The damages of the Civil War in Espoo were minimal, except for one primary school which had been hit by German bombing.[33] However, many houses in Espoo suffered from famine after the Civil War. The war had cut off a large part of the foreign trade in Finland, which worsened the famine. Particularly the price of grain and other necessary foodstuffs had risen significantly, which caused price limits for the most important products. The situation eased out in 1919, but food regulation was only finally discontinued in 1921.[32]: 41 

After the end of the war, the White Guards went out to look for Reds fled into the forests in Espoo for a long time. In June 1918 the White Guards appealed to the municipal council of Espoo to ask for funds to travel to prison camps in order to provide expert help in judging reds from Espoo. 12 members of the Red Guard in Espoo had been sent to prison camps.[32]: 42–43 

Under the 1918 peasant law, peasants were freed from the power of their private masters, which led to a widespread settlement of steadless population in Finland. From 1919 to 1925 about 150 peasants and crofters in Espoo bought land for themselves with the grant given by the Finnish state. The new farms thus acquired still remained small, which caused the need to acquire further income through forestry and handyman work.[32]: 42–43 

20th century

 
VR Class Vk3 steam locomotive at Kauklahti railway station in the 1920s.
 
The so-called "Hip flask houses in Tapiola were built from 1959 to 1961. This picture is from 1967.

In 1920, Espoo was only a rural municipality of about 9,000 inhabitants, of whom 70% were Swedish speaking. Agriculture was the primary source of income, with 75% of the population making their living from farming.

Kauniainen was separated from Espoo in 1920,[34] and it gained city rights the same year as Espoo, in 1972. However, the border between Espoo and Kauniainen was only defined in the late 1940s.

Espoo started to grow rapidly in the 1940s and 1950s. Shortly after the end of the Continuation War, the population of Espoo grew by four thousand as frontline soldiers and evacuees from ceded territories (including the Porkkalanniemi peninsula, leased to the Soviet Union between 1944 and 1956) were settled in the city.[35]

Espoo's location right next to the capital city of Helsinki attracted people working in the capital city to move into the rapidly growing neighbour city, and already before World War II there were many suburbs along the Rantarata railway, such as Leppävaara, Kilo and Kauklahti which had formed into an industrial area. After the new Jorvaksentie road (predecessor to the Länsiväylä highway) was completed, new detached houses were built along it, particularly in Westend. After the war, many detached houses for soldiers having fought at the frontline were built in Espoo. The highest increase in population only started in the early 1950s when the Asuntosäätiö foundation started construction of the garden city of Tapiola, and construction of a new campus area of the Helsinki University of Technology started in the neighbouring district of Otaniemi.

In the 1940s and 1950s Espoo grew more rapidly than it could afford. The infrastructure of Espoo was not prepared to handle such rapid growth. There was no time for proper zoning, instead new houses were built as people bought lots in the city.[35]

A major change happened in the late 1940s as the Helsinki University of Technology moved from Hietalahti in Helsinki to larger premises in Otaniemi, and the planning of the Tapiola garden city district was started. As the city did not have enough money to fund the construction of the student village in Otaniemi, the technical university students took to the matter to their own hands, both by gathering money through various activities and taking part in the actual construction. About 800 thousand bricks from the Embassy of the Soviet Union in Helsinki, which had been destroyed in the bombing of Helsinki, were used to build student apartments in Otaniemi.[35]

From 1944 to 1956 the Espoonlahti bay between Espoo and Kirkkonummi served as the border of the Porkkala Naval Base under the control of the Soviet Union. A large part of Kirkkonummi, as well as a narrow strip of the sea and a couple of islands in Espoo were included in the area of the naval base. In Espoo, the Kauklahti railway station near the border to the naval base became a tightly controlled border station between Finland and the Soviet Union. The land connection to Porkkala went via the Kivenlahti bridge. During the time of the naval base, part of the western coast had been evacuated, and the windows of the houses in the border villages on the Soviet side had to be covered during night time. The windows of the trains travelling through the area rented to the Soviet Union had to be covered with wooden hatches from the outside for the duration of passage through Soviet territory, and could only be reopened upon reentry to Finland.

Unlike the neighbouring city of Helsinki, Espoo failed to develop a proper city centre, forming instead into an area of multiple centres. This was partly because a 1968 zoning plan where Espoo was divided into four separate areas, with the administrative centre situated in Muurala (later known as Espoon keskus), partly because most of the land in Espoo was not actually owned by the city but was instead in private ownership, directing new construction to wherever it was possible instead of using a proper zoning plan.[35]

The rather tightly populated districts of Tapiola and Leppävaara in eastern Espoo underwent attempts to separate from the city of Espoo, from two directions: on the one hand, the inhabitants of the districts wanted them to become independent municipalities, while on the other hand, the neighbouring city of Helsinki wanted to annex the districts into Helsinki. These attempts all failed and the districts remained as part of Espoo, which changed from a rural municipality first to a market town in 1963 and then to a city in 1972.[35] The new administrative centre of the city, Espoon keskus, was built in the 1970s around the Espoo railway station and the old grey stone church in Espoo.

The non-centralised nature of Espoo led to significant differences between its districts. Different parts of Espoo included the wealthy garden city district of Tapiola, large areas that still remained as countryside, and new suburbs such as Haukilahti, Karakallio and Soukka. Disagreements between different districts were common and gave Espoo a nationwide reputation of a quarrelsome municipality.[35]

The city quickly developed from a rural municipality into a fully-fledged industrial city, gaining city rights in 1972. On 1 January 1972, when Espoo gained city rights, it had a population of over 100,000, making it into the fourth-largest city in Finland at the time, after Helsinki, Turku and Tampere.[35]

Due to its proximity to Helsinki, Espoo soon became popular amongst people working in the capital. In the fifty years from 1950 to 2000, the population of Espoo grew from 22,000 to 210,000, mainly due to large-scale migration from other parts of Finland. Since 1945, the majority of people in Espoo have been Finnish-speaking. In 2006, the Swedish-speaking inhabitants represented barely 9% of the total population. The population growth is still continuing, but at a slower rate. In the summer of 2022, the population of Espoo grew to over 300,000 inhabitants.[36]

Market town and city

Espoo became a market town in 1963. The population of Espoo at the time was 65,000. About a decade later, Espoo became a city in 1972.[19] The districts of Suvela, Olari, Matinkylä and Kivenlahti were built in the 1970s. The first of the high-rise buildings in Keilaniemi, the Neste head office was built in 1976.[37]

Many of the important roads in Finland go through Espoo. Finland's first highway, the Finnish national road 1, was built in 1962. The Ring I beltway was also built in the 1960s. The next outer beltway, Ring II, was taken into use in 2000.[19]

In the original plan for the centre of the Tapiola garden city, architect Aarne Ervi had reserved a space for a theatre building at the end of the fountain pool, but the theatre building was never built.[38] The decision to build a new cultural centre was made in a celebratory session of the Espoo city council on 1 January 1972, when Espoo became a city. Two years later the first room program of the new building was completed, defining its needs and surface area. An architecture contest was held for its design in 1979. About 60 different proposals were submitted for the contest, with architect Arto Sipinen's design Kuunsilta ("Moonlight bridge") being chosen as the winner. Construction of the Espoo Cultural Centre started in 1986. The foundation stone was laid on Jean Sibelius Day on 8 December. The building was constructed of quartz sand bricks, travertine tiles, glass and mosaic concrete, and its cost rose to about 130 million Finnish markka.[38][39] The building was completed in January 1989.[39]

21st century

 
The Urheilupuisto metro station under construction in February 2016.

By the start of the 21st century, Espoo had become the second largest city in the entire country in Finland with a population of slightly over 200 thousand, second only to the capital city Helsinki.

The Länsimetro transport line started construction in 2010 and its first stage was taken into use on 18 November 2017.[40]

Geography

General

 
The districts and major areas of Espoo
 
The bare cliffs on the islands of the outer archipelago change into forested islands closer to the shore. This picture shows the former fortification island of Kytö.
 
A landscape view from the Kasavuori hill in Soukka.
 
The Nuuksio national park.

Espoo has an area of 528 square kilometres (203.9 sq mi)—312 square kilometres (120.5 sq mi) (59%) of land and 216 square kilometres (83.4 sq mi) (41%) of water. Sea water makes up 37% of the total area of Espoo and inland water makes up a bit over 3%.[9] To the north of the lush river areas and the fields in central Espoo, the archipelagal and coastal zone in southern Espoo changes into lake-filled and rocky terrain. At some places the lake areas in northern Espoo resemble the Finnish Lakeland. The largest part of the lake ridge in Nuuksio is located in Espoo, but a part of it is located in neighbouring Vihti.[41]: 5  The largest lakes in Uusimaa, Lohjanjärvi and Hiidenvesi, are located west of the ridge.

The highest point in Espoo is Velskola at 114.2 m above sea level, and the lowest point is at sea level. Espoo is a part of the Greater Helsinki metropolitan region and is contiguously bordered by the cities, towns and municipalities of Kirkkonummi, Vihti, Nurmijärvi, Vantaa, Kauniainen and Helsinki.

For a city of its size, Espoo is home to exceptionally large natural areas. The southern part of the city is characterized by maritime environment, including a varied coastline and an archipelago consisting of 165 islands.[42]

Bedrock

The minerals and structures of the rocky and hilly topography of Espoo were formed about 1880 to 1650 million years ago. Particularly the Weichselian glaciation has had an effect on the current environment - the continental ice sheet withdrew from what is now Espoo about 13 thousand years ago. The first areas to surface from underneath the sea were the high hills in northern Espoo, such as Mustankorvenkallio.[43]: 11  The numerous smooth cliffs on the seashore and in the archipelago were caused by wear by the continental ice sheet; there are grooves on their surfaces, indicating the direction of the flow of the ice sheet. Icebergs split off from the ice sheet have transported glacial erratics,[44] including those in Kunnarla, Soukka and Suomenoja.

Main minerals in the Espoo bedrock include gneiss, migmatite, granite, gabbro, amphibolite and mica schist. Rare orbicular granite can be found in Nuuksio, the deposit is internationally valuable.[43] At many places there are thick layers of clay on top of the bedrock, and fields were plowed onto clay-covered valleys. The thickness of the clay layers was mainly formed in the Baltic Ice Lake and the Yoldia Sea.[43]: 12  The effect of the bedrock on the traditional Espoo natural landscape was significant; high and steep cliffs stand up from shallowly waving fields. The oblong lakes in northern Espoo are located in valleys in the bedrock. The formation of the bedrock has determined the shapes of the coastline, such as Espoonlahti and Laajalahti. Because of upthrust, paludification of forests and overgrowth of lakes, bogs and layers of peat have formed on top of the clay at some places.[44]

Sea area

The sea area of Espoo is a considerably narrow strip between the sea areas of Helsinki and Kirkkonummi.[45]: 26  The depth of the southern part of the sea area, in the outer archipelago, is a few dozen metres at the most. The ship route between Helsinki and Stockholm, Sweden goes through the outermost parts of the sea area which contains small treeless, sea-washed islets. One of them is the former fortification island of Kytö. The smallest islands are shallow islets, such as Stenskär. They are significant nesting grounds for birds and many of them are nature-protected areas. In summertime there might be flowering meadow patches on the islands. The islands closest to the Espoo shoreline include Stora Herrö, Pentala, Kopplorna and Lehtisaaret. The islands host many vacation buildings, and they are often referred to as an intermediary archipelago.[45]: 20 

The islands in the inner archipelago are larger and lusher and contain boat harbours and buildings, as well as permanent settlements on the islands closest to the shore. There is a land connection from the mainland to the inhabited islands in Suvisaaristo and it forms a district of its own, with a more rural image than most of Espoo.

The sea area extends inland at many places as bays, of which the largest are Espoonlahti in the west and Laajalahti in the east. Bays on the shoreline between them include Nuottalahti, Haukilahti and Otsolahti. The bays are shallow and contain many islands, particularly in Espoonlahti. Most of the islands in Laajalahti are located across the municipal border in Helsinki. The largest peninsula in Espoo is Soukka, fracturing into an archipelago in the south. Thus the peninsula hardly offers any views to the open sea. The nearest ship harbours are located in Helsinki, while the Espoo shoreline contains many small boat harbours, the largest being the boat harbour in Suomenoja.[46] The maritime traffic in front of Espoo mainly consists of motor boats of various sizes, water scooters and ferries handling traffic in the archipelago.

In terms of natural geography, the coastal waters of Espoo are divided into four different sea areas, consisting counting from the west of Espoonlahti, Suvisaaristo-Lauttasaari and Seurasaari. The fourth sea area is Helsinki-Porkkala to the south of the other three. The surface area of the Espoonlahti sea area is 19.2 square kilometres. The Espoonlahti nature preserve area is located in its northern part. The western part of the sea area is located in the neighbouring municipality of Kirkkonummi. The surface area of the Suvisaaristo-Lauttasaari sea area is 48.5 square kilometres. It reaches from the shores of the islands of Stora Herrö and Pentala up to the West Harbour in Helsinki. The surface area of the Seurasaari sea area is 13.1 square kilometres. The Laajalahti nature preserve area is located in its northwestern part. Most of the sea area is located in neighbouring Helsinki. The surface area of the Helsinki-Porkkala sea area is 400.5 square kilometres. It reaches from the eastern shore of the Porkkalanniemi peninsula up to Suomenlinna and Santahamina. Islands in the sea area include Kytö, Stenskär, Knapperskär and Gåsgrund.[47]

Shoreline

The shoreline of Espoo is about 58 kilometres long and there are 165 islands in front of it.[48] The shoreline is diverse and contains decomposing bays, reed beds, sandy beaches, coastal cliffs and boat harbours. The district of Westend contains private house lots reaching to the sea shore, while the sea shore in the rest of Espoo is mainly in public use. The Rantaraitti hiking route spans almost the entire sea shore of Espoo.[49] The district of Kivenlahti contains coastal cliffs, man-made shoreline and sandy beaches.

The land in Espoo is rising by about a quarter of a metre per century and the moist land rise shores are slowly becoming bogs.[43]: 12 

Continental area

 
Lake Pitkäjärvi in Nuuksio in northern Espoo.
 
A view of the Länsiväylä highway in southern Espoo, at the coast of the Gulf of Finland.
 
The river Mankinjoki flows rapidly in central Espoo.

There are six Natura 2000 areas in Espoo: the Bånberget forest area, Espoonlahti-Saunalahti (partly located in Kirkkonummi), the Laajalahti bird waters, Matalajärvi, Nuuksio (partly located in Kirkkonummi and Vihti) and the bogs, groves and old forests in Vestra (partly located in Vantaa).[50] The forests in Espoo are mainly pine barrens consisting mostly of spruces and pines, with some deciduous trees. There are lush and diverse groves in some places, containing many hardwood trees such as oak.[51] The ecological core area of southern Espoo is the Espoo Central Park, consisting mainly of two forest massives: Harmaakallo and Bosmalm.[52]

The most famous and most popular nature area in Espoo is the Nuuksio National Park located on the lake highland of northern Espoo, reaching over to Kirkkonummi and Vihti. As well as the contiguous forest and pools of sweet water, Nuuksio contains small bogs and meadows. There are also lush grove-like brook valleys in the area.[53]

The highest spot in Espoo, Mustankorvenkallio, is located in Velskola to the southwest of Saarijärvi 114 metres above sea level and over 40 metres above the water level of Saarijärvi.[54] There are also considerably high spots very near the coast, such as the Kasavuori hill in Soukka, rising to 44 metres above sea level.[55]

Inland waters

There are over a hundred lakes and ponds in Espoo, of which 73 have an area of over a hectare.[41]: 5 [56] The lakes in Espoo were formed when the land slowly started rising after the continental ice sheet had thawed, and water started flowing into the crevices in the bedrock. The oldest lakes in Espoo are Kalatoin, Iso Majaslampi, Orajärvi and Pieni Majaslampi, all located over 80 metres above sea level. At that time, what is now the Baltic Sea was in a so-called Yoldia Sea phase, which had formed when the surface of the Baltic Ice Lake had lowered tens of metres in a short time. Nuuksio slowly expanded into part of the mainland and new lakes were formed when the sea level sank. Development stopped for about a millennium and a half when the ancient Baltic Sea changed into the Ancylus Lake. Its surface was originally about 60 metres above the current sea level. The Ancylus Lake formed into the salty Littorina Sea when the current Danish straits started opening up. The surface of the Littorina Sea was about 34 metres above the current sea level. At that time, almost all lakes in northern Espoo had been separated from the sea. Only the lake Nuuksion Pitkäjärvi remained as a narrow, fjord-like bay. The shore of the Littorina Sea remained at its place for a long time as upthrust slowed down. Rocky rims remain of the ancient sea shore on hills and cliffs. Nuuksion Pitkäjärvi only separated from the sea and became an inland lake about five millennia ago. About four millennia ago the land had risen so far that also Lake Bodom, Lippajärvi and other pools in central Espoo changed from shallow bays into lakes.[41]: 15 

Most of the lakes in Espoo are located to the north of the Finnish national road 1, particularly in the lake highlands in Nuuksio. There are three pools named Pitkäjärvi ("long lake"): Pitkäjärvi, Nuuksion Pitkäjärvi and Velskolan Pitkäjärvi. The largest lake in Espoo is Lake Bodom with a surface area of 4.1 square kilometres and an average depth of 4.3 metres.[57]: 50  The largest depth of Nuuksion Pitkäjärvi is 18 metres and the average depth is 6.5 metres, and there are tens of lakes and ponds in its drainage basin of 60 square kilometres.[57]: 37  There are few lakes in southern Espoo. The shallow lake Hannusjärvi with a surface area of six hectares is located in Kaitaa[57]: 53  and the small lake Pentalanjärvi is located in the island of Pentala.[57]: 55 

Because the sweet water pools to the south of the Salpausselkä ridges formed when the ancient bays separated from the sea into lakes because of upthrust, only very few islands developed in them.[41]: 15  One of the few inland islands in Espoo is an island of fifteen hectares in the lake Saarijärvi located near the border to Vihti. There was a suggestion to name the rocky island covered in pine forests as Partiosaari, but nothing became of this.[41]: 61 

The differences in the surface heights of the lakes in Espoo are considerable. Lake Pieni Majaslampi is located the highest up, 97 metres above sea level. Lake Saarijärvi near it is located 25 metres lower. Because of the height differences, small rapids sometimes form in spring time in the creeks between adjacent water pools.[58]: 50 

Features

Although Espoo is relatively highly populated, it has large amounts of the countryside and natural wilderness, particularly in the city's western and northern portions. The city has a total of 71 lakes, the largest of which are Lake Bodom, Nuuksion Pitkäjärvi, Vanhankylän Pitkäjärvi, Loojärvi, Velskolan Pitkäjärvi, Saarijärvi, Matalajärvi, Siikajärvi, and Lippajärvi. The city has a large coastline on the Gulf of Finland.

Espoo has six Natura 2000 protected areas: Bånberget forests, Espoonlahti–Saunalahti bay area (partially in Kirkkonummi), Laajalahti bay, Matalajärvi lake, Nuuksio National Park (partially in Kirkkonummi and Vihti), as well as forests in Vestra (partially in Vantaa).

The official animal of Espoo is the Siberian flying squirrel, the official bird is the common blackbird, and the official plant is Anemone nemorosa.

Flora and fauna

 
Rapids in Bemböle.

The city's Central Park's fauna represents a typical range of Finnish forest species. The most common flora in the Central Park includes Equisetum, ferns, Anemone, Lythrum and Orchidaceae. Common mammal species present in Espoo include the European hare and the mountain hare, the raccoon dog, the red squirrel, the elk, the red fox, various bat species, the European badger, as well as the roe deer and the white-tailed deer,[59] which was introduced to Finland in the 1930s as a gift from Finnish American migrants.[60]

The Suomenoja Bird Reserve in Finnoo, southern Espoo, is considered to be nationally significant for its bird diversity.[61] Among others, there are endangered moorhens, as well as horned grebes and gadwalls. The most common and audible maritime bird species is the black-headed gull, but the whooper swan is also a common sight in the city's archipelago, where white-tailed eagles can be found as well.[61]

The city is home to 73 vulnerable or endangered species,[62] including the Siberian flying squirrel, whose Finnish populations have experienced a steep decline for many decades due to logging. The flying squirrel is considered to be the official animal of Espoo,[63] and the squirrel populations are especially plentiful in the northernmost parts of the city. However, the flying squirrel is also present in some southern areas, including the Central Park, Soukka, Espoon keskus, Tapiola, Laajalahti, Hannusmetsä and Matinkylä.[64]

Climate

Temperature and rainfall

 
Spring: May Day celebrations in the Puropuisto park in Soukka.
 
Summer: Piispansilta in Matinkylä.
 
Autumn: Suvisaaristo viewed from the north.
 
Winter: Boats on the shore of Lake Bodom.

Espoo's location in the northern latitudes between the large continent of Eurasia and the even larger Atlantic Ocean causes rapid changes in the weather in Espoo. The height of the terrain from sea level also has an effect on the climate: most of the people in Espoo live south of Lake Bodom, where the terrain only rises over 50 metres above sea level in a few spots. There are no proper plateaus in northern Espoo either: the terrain rises a bit over 100 metres above sea level at the most.

Espoo is located in a hemiboreal zone, also known as the oak zone. The most important factor affecting the environment is the Gulf of Finland, cooling the weather down in summer and warming it up in autumn. The coastal convergence increases rainfall going inward into the mainland. The local climate in Nuuksio is different from the rest of Espoo: the terrain in Nuuksio rises up from almost all directions, which causes a forced rise upwards in air currents, which in turn has an effect on the clouds. The ridge in Nuuksio has the highest rainfall in all of Finland. The climate in Nuuksio is also affected by the fractionate terrain, causing friction increasing rainfall. In 1981 the rainfall in Nupuri was measured as 1,109 millimetres, an all-time record in Finland.[65] In southern Espoo the area of Suurpelto is slightly cooler than its surroundings.[66]

Although Espoo is the second-largest city in Finland, its meteorological averages have not been measured. At the weather stations in the neighbouring municipalities the average temperature from 1981 to 2010 was about 5 to 6 degrees Celsius. The coldest time of the year was from January to February and the warmest time was from July to August. The temperature differences between the seasons grow smaller when moving out towards the sea. On the coast and in the archipelago the temperature rarely rises above 30 degrees or falls below -20 degrees. The average rainfall is from 600 to 700 millimetres per year. The driest season is in springtime and the rainiest season is in August and from October to December. The most of the rainy days occur in autumn.[67]

The Finnish Meteorological Institute has eight outposts in Espoo: Friisilä, Kivenlahti, Kytö, Leppävaara, Luukki, Nuuksio, Otaniemi and Tapiola. Of these, Nuuksio and Tapiola are weather outposts, taken into use in the 2010s. The Nuuksio outpost is located in a sparsely populated and fractionate lake ridge 90 metres above sea level. The Tapiola outpost is located in a suburb on the coast of the Gulf of Finland 6 metres above sea level.[68]

Snow conditions

On average, snow first falls on Espoo after Christmas and melts away from late March to early April. The snow conditions vary more on the coast than inland. On some years, the snow may last up to five months, while on some years, there might be hardly any snow during the entire winter. Lows coming from the southwest carry temperate air which can keep the snow layers thin or even melt the snow away.[65]

Winds

 
Especially at springtime, the sea wind blows clouds into inland. This picture shows a view of the street Olarinkatu to the north. Birch trees usually grow dogears around May Day.

The dominant wind direction sector in Espoo is south-west, like in Finland in general.[69] The sea wind has a large effect on the local winds on the coast, and can even create its own wind field. It can change the direction and speed of the basic wind on the coast for many times during the same day. Particularly in springtime and early summertime the sea wind keeps the archipelago and coastline free of clouds, while there is a white cloud wall further inland, which can cause rain showers.[70]

Air quality

The air quality in Espoo is considerably good despite the negative effect of the traffic. Particularly on pedestrian roads, sand is used to combat slipperiness, which causes a major dust problem in springtime. Studded tires also contribute to the number of harmful particles. The air quality in Espoo is measured in Leppävaara and Luukki. There are also mobile measurement stations.[71][72] Alder and birch pollen has a harmful effect on the air quality in springtime, hay and mugwort in summertime.[73]

Lighting conditions

Espoo is located at a latitude of 60 degrees north, which causes the duration of daylight to vary considerably. At summer solstice daylight lasts for nineteen hours, while at winter solstice it only lasts for six hours. The angle of the sun is at its highest at 53.4 degrees in summertime and only at 6.6 degrees in wintertime. Espoo is among the northernmost places to have nautical dusk even at summer solstice, meaning the sun is at least six degrees below the horizon at the darkest hour of the night.[74] At that time, there is no total darkness during the entire night. In contrast, daylight at winter solstice is short, especially when there are only few sunny hours from November to January.[74]

Shadows cast by buildings are long even at summertime. They are at their shortest at summer solstice, about 75 percent of the height of the buildings. For example, the shadow of Niittyhuippu is 63 metres long at the time. At noon at winter solstice the shadows can be up to 8.8 times the height of the entire building. For example, the shadow of the Tapiola Central Tower is 430 metres long at the time.[75]

The official time in Espoo is measured by the 30th eastern meridian. The city is located over five degrees west of it, so the solar noon occurs over 20 minutes later than on the 30th meridian.

Growth season

Espoo is located at the plant success zone 1b. The thermal growth season lasts for a bit over half a year on average. In general, the growth season starts in April and ends in October. Sometimes it continues to early November. The sum of the effective temperature during the thermal growth season is over 1,400 degrees Celsius times day, and annual variations are large.[76]

Administration

Espoo belongs to the region of Uusimaa. Supreme decision-making power in the city is held by the City Council of Espoo. The council has 75 members, elected for a period of four years.

Subdivisions

 
A high-rise building in Kivenlahti.

Espoo is divided into seven major areas (Finnish: suuralueet, Swedish: storområden): Vanha-Espoo (with administrative center), Suur-Espoonlahti, Pohjois-Espoo, Suur-Kauklahti, Suur-Leppävaara, Suur-Matinkylä, and Suur-Tapiola of which Suur-Leppävaara has the highest population. These major areas are then divided into a total of 56 districts.[77] The healthcare, social, cultural and school services of the city have been concentrated to the regional centres in the major areas.

Statistics about Espoo also include the division "other", which included 4,582 people on New Year 2022. From 2011 to 2022 the population growth was the highest in Suur-Kauklahti, about 70%. The growth in Suur-Matinkylä was about 27%, while Suur-Tapiola and Suur-Leppävaara grew by about 20%. The population in Suur-Espoonlahti and Vanha-Espoo grew by about 12% to 13% and that in Pohjois-Espoo by about 10%.[78][79]

The postal codes in Espoo start with the digits "02", like in Kauniainen, Kirkkonummi and Siuntio as well. Espoo includes the postal codes 02100 to 02380, 02600 to 02860 (excluding 02700 Kauniainen) and 02920 to 02980. The lowest postal codes are located in the south and the highest ones in the north.

Municipal annexations

In connection to the municipal renewal plan in Finland there have been suggestions to annex Espoo into the rest of the Finnish capital region, together with some of the surrounding municipalities.[80] So far the City Council of Espoo has strongly opposed these suggestions.[81]

Organisation

The city of Espoo has three industries and one result area.

  • Result area of vitality. Led by Mervi Heinaro.[82]
  • Industry of growth and education. Led by Harri Rinta-Aho.[82]
  • Industry of welfare. Led by Sanna Svahn.[82]
  • Industry of technology and the environment. Led by Olli Isotalo.[82]

City and municipal managers

 
Jukka Mäkelä, the city manager of Espoo, at Espoo Day 2019.

The office of a municipal manager was introduced to the rural municipalities in Finland through the 1948 municipal law, but in Espoo this office was only first fulfilled in 1962, one year before Espoo became a market town. Before this, the duties of the municipal manager were handled by the speaker of the municipal council.[83]

Municipal managers of Espoo include:

City Council

Politically, Espoo is a clearly bourgeois city, with the largest party being the National Coalition Party. Support of the Green League and the Swedish People's Party of Finland is also larger in Espoo than the average of Finland.[citation needed] The parties with the largest increase in support in the 2010s were the Green League and Movement Now.[84][85]

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1694[d]1,800—    
1721[e]1,500−16.7%
17491,900+26.7%
18253,600+89.5%
18654,000+11.1%
19015,888+47.2%
19107,891+34.0%
19208,817+11.7%
193011,370+29.0%
194013,378+17.7%
195022,878+71.0%
196053,042+131.8%
197092,655+74.7%
1975120,632+30.2%
1980137,409+13.9%
1985156,778+14.1%
1990172,629+10.1%
1995191,247+10.8%
2000213,271+11.5%
2005231,704+8.6%
2010247,970+7.0%
2015269,802+8.8%
2020292,796+8.5%
2021297,132+1.5%
2030*331,612+11.6%
2040*354,571+6.9%
* = population prediction.
Source: 1694–1865[86]
Statistics Finland.[4][87]
 
The population of Espoo between 1900 and 2040.

In 2020, Espoo had a population of 292,796 residents—an 18% increase over 2010.[4][9] The city is the 7th-most densely populated in Finland.

The population by citizenship in 2018 was 89.1% Finnish and 10.9% other nationalities. Religious affiliation was 53.6% Lutheran, 4.3% other, and 42.1% no religious affiliation.

Espoo contains many high income suburbs, and six out of the ten highest average income postal code areas in Finland are in Espoo.[citation needed]

In Espoo, the average income of foreign speaking men was €35,000 annually and for women €22,000 in 2018. In Helsinki the figure is €30,000 for men and €21,000 for women. In total the average income in Espoo (including foreign speakers) was over €42,000 in 2018.[88]

In 2021, there were 59,837 residents with a foreign background, 20% of the population.[89] The largest groups are from Estonia, Russia and Iraq.

Largest groups of foreign residents[90]
Nationality Population (2021) %
  Russia 8,445 2.8
  Estonia 6,269 2.1
  Iraq 3,943 1.3
  India 3,613 1.2
  China 3,393 1.1
  Somalia 3,047 1.0
  Yugoslavia 2,861 1.0
  Iran 1,819 0.6
  Afghanistan 1,627 0.5
  Philippines 1,599 0.5
  Vietnam 1,514 0.5
  Sweden 1,492 0.5
  Pakistan 1,282 0.4
  Turkey 1,040 0.4

Language

 
A high-rise building in Kivenlahti.
 
A landscape in Espoonkartano on the Sågbro bridge.

Population by mother tongue

  Finnish (73.2%)
  Swedish (6.7%)
  Russian (2.8%)
  Estonian (1.9%)
  Arabic (1.7%)
  English (1.3%)
  Chinese (1.2%)
  Somali (1.0%)
  Other (10.2%)

The City of Espoo is officially bilingual. In 2021, the majority of the population, 73.2%, spoke Finnish as their first language, and 6.7% spoke Swedish. The number of people speaking Sámi, the third official language in Finland, was sixteen people. About 20% of Espoo's population has a first language other than Finnish or Swedish.[89] The number of foreign language speakers in Espoo is smaller than in Vantaa, but larger than in Helsinki.[90] According to an estimate, the number of foreign language speakers will rise to 30% of the city's population by 2030 and in 2027 almost a half (43.3%) of the people of 35 to 64 years in Espoo is estimated to be a foreign language speaker.[91]

The proportion of Swedish speakers decreased the most in the 1950s: in the 1950s, Swedish speakers amounted to 43.1% of the population (about 10,800 people[92]), while in 1960 they amounted to 23.5% (about 13,300 people[93]) This was caused by the rapid urbanization, which lead to a strong positive immigration of Finnish speakers from other parts of the country.

The number of Swedish speakers slowly increased up to the 2010s, when they numbered about 20,300, while the proportion has decreased year by year. In 1996, the proportion fell below 10%. By the 2020s the proportion of Swedish speakers in Espoo was about 7% of the population. By absolute numbers, Espoo was the second most Swedish-speaking municipality in Finland after Helsinki, before Raseborg, Vaasa, Porvoo and Korsholm.[90]

In 2018, the largest proportions of Swedish speakers in Espoo were in Suvisaaristo (33.6%), Espoonkartano (29.9%), Sepänkylä (24.1%) and Bodom (21.3%).[94] By absolute numbers, the most Swedish speakers lived in Haukilahti (993 people) and Matinkylä (813 people).[94]

The proportion of Finnish speakers has decreased significantly during the last two decades. In 1999, the proportion of Finnish speakers was 88%, and in 2021 it was about 73%.[90]

The proportion of foreign language speakers has increased drastically: in 1999, it was about 4%, and in 2021 about 20%. The foreign language speakers in Espoo are a heterogeneous group divided into tens of different languages, of which the Russian speakers form the largest part, amounting to about 3% of the population in 2021. The proportion of foreign language speakers in Espoo was slightly higher than the average in Uusimaa.[90]

In 2019, there were 33,576 foreign citizens in Espoo, about 11.6% of the population.[95]

Congregations

 
The Olari Church.

At the end of the year 2019 57.1 percent of Espoo's population belonged to the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland.[96] According to the 2018 division Espoo is home to the following Evangelical Lutheran congregations:[97]

  • Espoonlahti congregation (formerly known as the Kivenlahti congregation)
  • Espoo cathedral congregation (formerly known as the Kanta-Espoo congregation)
  • Leppävaara congregation
  • Olari congregation
  • Tapiola congregation
  • Esbo svenska församling

Together these congregations form the Espoo Congregation Union (Finnish: Espoon seurakuntayhtymä, Swedish: Esbo kyrkliga samfällighet).

In 2003, of the population of Espoo, 79.5 percent belonged to the Evangelical Lutheran Church, 18.0 percent did not belong to any religious organisation, 1.2 percent belonged to the Orthodox Church of Finland, 0.4 percent were Catholic and 0.2 percent were Jehovah's Witnesses. Members of the Evangelical Free Church of Finland, Mormons, Jews, Muslims, other Orthodox and Methodists amounted to 0.1 percent each.[98]

There are five Lutheran churches in Espoo (each Finnish-speaking congregation has one), including the Espoo Cathedral, the Espoonlahti Church, the Olari Church, the Tapiola Church and the Leppävaara Church. There are also 27 chapels of the Lutheran Church in Espoo.[99]

Of the Orthodox congregations in Finland, the Helsinki Orthodox Congregation is active in Espoo.[100] It has the Church of the Sanctifier Herman of Alaska in Tapiola.[101]

Of the congregations of the Pentecostal Church of Finland, the Pentecostal Congregation of Espoo is active in Espoo. Individual Pentecostal congregations in Espoo include the Espoonlahti Pentecostal congregation, the Keski-Espoo near congregation, the Leppävaara Missionary chapel and Mankby bibliska församling.[102] Of the congregations of the Evangelical Free Church of Finland, the Espoo free congregation is active in Espoo.[103]

Former congregations

Former congregations in the current area of the city of Espoo include:

  • The Espoo congregation (split into the Finnish and Swedish speaking congregations of Espoo in 1950)
  • The Espoo Finnish congregation (split into the congregations of southern Espoo, Espoo proper and Leppävaara in 1964, the Tapiola congregation split off in 1960)
  • The congregation of southern Espoo (split into the Kivenlahti and Olari congregations in 1975)

Economy

Economical history

 
In addition to fields, many buildings remain of rural Espoo, such as the Punainen tupa ("red house") in Henttaa.
 
Office buildings in Keilaniemi.
 
The shopping centre Iso Omena, opened in 2001, is located in Matinkylä near the sea shore.
 
The Suomenoja power plant.

Still in the middle 19th century, Espoo was a rural community living in subsistence economy. There was hardly any industry, the villages were small and situated evenly across different parts of the parish. There was some population concentration at the location of the current district of Espoon keskus and along the Suuri Rantatie road, and some dense population on the shore of the Gulf of Finland. In 1865 farming was the primary source of income for about 90% of the men in Espoo. There were about seventy craftsmen and about twenty people working in the industry. Of the women in Espoo, over one fifth worked as maids.[104]: 48 

The economical history of 19th-century Espoo also includes some small-scale mining activity. There was ore mining at the lands of the Kilo mansion around 1840, and this activity continued to the 1850s. The ore was of good quality but poor, and the ore streaks were fragmentary. In the end, the amount of ore mined from Kilo was very small.[105]: 108  A new discovery of ore was made at the lands of the Alberga manor in the early 1840s. At most seven people worked at the site, but the amount of ore mined in Alberga ended up very small as well. The mining activity slowly waned and stopped completely in 1851.[105]: 116 

The Espoo parish was not a neighbour of the city of Helsinki in the 19th century - there were lands of the Helsinki parish in between. The rapid growth of Helsinki attracted people from Espoo: despite the short distance, travel between Espoo and Helsinki was so slow, that moving into Helsinki was almost unavoidable if one happened to get a job there.[104]: 49 

The rapid growth of Helsinki started also showing outside the administrative borders of the city. The first industrial area in Espoo was born near the shore of the Espoonlahti bay. In the late 19th century there were three brick factories and a steam-powered sawmill in the area. Clay from the Espoonlahti bay was well suited for making bricks, and the bricks were easy to transport to Helsinki over sea. For example, the Uspenski Cathedral in Katajanokka has been built from bricks from the Stensvik brick factory. The village of Mulby (Muulo in Finnish) became the industrial centre of Espoo, and its population grew manifold. Other villages in southwestern Espoo also grew through the industry. When the Rantarata railway was completed in the early 20th century part of the industry moved to the railway track, and the railway also enabled people to commute for work from Espoo to Helsinki.[104]: 49, 58 [106]: 7 

There was also glass industry in Espoo. Pehr Appelgrén founded a bottle glass factory near the Espoo railway station in 1912. The factory closed down in 1922. The Kauklahti glass factory started in 1923, and by the 1930s it was the largest illumination glass factory in Finland. The factory closed down in 1951. Glass industry in Espoo altogether waned in the 1950s.[104]: 59, 60 

By the late 1930s, there were about thirty businesses in Espoo. In addition to glass and brick industry, the parish included machinery workshops, sawmills and metallurgy workshops. There was industrial clothing manufacturing in Kauklahti and a clock factory in Viherlaakso. The steam-powered sawmill in Bastvik, founded in 1876, was economically quite stable; its saw equipment was moved to the Hanko Peninsula in the 20th century.[104]: 58–61  The merchant F. F. Sjöblom founded the first shop in Espoo in Stensvik soon after founding of shops had been liberated in 1868. At the time when Finland became independent, there were about 40 shops in Espoo, most of them general stores.[104]: 62 

Despite the increase in industry and service jobs, Espoo was still a predominantly rural parish in 1920. About two thirds of the population got their primary income from farming.[104]: 53  Rye and barley had been the primary crops in Espoo for centuries. By the 20th century the significance of cattle herding increased, and the farming of oats became more popular.[104]: 32, 55 

Construction and services became the basis of the economy in Espoo in the 1950s, when the rapid growth in population in Espoo started. In the 2010s, the primary industries counting by number of jobs are trade, accommodation and food and beverage industry as well as specialist services. The proportion of information and communications technology is about one tenth. About one sixth of the jobs are in industry and construction. The public sector is large: about one quarter of jobs were in the public sector in the middle 2010s.[106]: 17 

The transition from a medieval rural parish into an integral part of the Helsinki metropolitan area has dropped the proportion of farming and forestry jobs to about a fifth of a percent.[106]: 17 

Companies

Espoo is home to the head offices of several global companies and many high technology companies. The Aalto University campus in southeastern Espoo is at the heart of research and development.[107]

The head offices of Nokia, Fortum, Neste, Huhtamäki, Metsä Board, Orion, Oriola, Outotec and LähiTapiola are located in Espoo.[108][109][110][111][112][113][114][115]

The largest shopping centres in Espoo are Iso Omena, Sello, Lippulaiva, Entresse and Ainoa. Along the continuous traffic route formed by Merituulentie to the north of Länsiväylä, Kuitinmäentie and Martinsillantie are located the shopping centre Niitty, Länsikeskus, the retail park Merituuli, the shopping centre Liila as well as several leisure, indoor decoration and automobile businesses. The small shopping centre Suuris, opened in 2017, is located in Suurpelto along Ring II.

Industrial areas in Espoo include Juvanmalmi, Karamalmi and Kivenlahti.

City of Espoo

The city of Espoo funds its services mainly by taxation. In 2021 the tax income of the city, consisting of the municipal tax, the communal tax and the property tax, amounted to 1,711 million euro,[116] with the municipal tax rate being 18.00 percent.[117] By number of employees, the city of Espoo is the biggest employer in Espoo: in 2016 it employed about 14 thousand people.[118]

The economy in Espoo leaves a surplus, but this is not enough to finance the investments of the growing city.[117]

Espoo has signed the principles of responsible investment of the United Nations. The city of Espoo has five investment funds: the basic services and land acquisition fund, the development fund of basic services, the development fund of entrepreneurship and employment, the investment fund and the accident fund.[117]

A characteristic feature of Espoo is that the city manages its investments through its daughter companies.[117]

Income level

The average income level in Espoo is higher than that in the rest of the capital region and particularly higher than that in the rest of Finland. In 2015, the taxable income in Espoo was 40% higher than in the rest of Finland. The unemployment rate in Espoo is high, but still lower than the average in Finland.[119] The highest-income areas in Espoo, such as Westend and Haukilahti, are mainly located on the coast. These districts are part of the Tapiola major district, whose income level is significantly higher than the average in Espoo. The income level in the Matinkylä and Espoonlahti major districts is near the average in Espoo. The income level in the Leppävaara major district and particularly in the Vanha-Espoo major district is lower than the average in Espoo.[120]

The city of Espoo is not particularly segregated by major districts, instead the differences in income are significantly higher within the major districts as between them. In low-come major districts the average income level is near the average in Helsinki. In some areas, such as in Kivenlahti and Suvela, it even falls below the average in Vantaa. Areas consisting of detached houses generally have higher income levels than areas consisting of apartment buildings.[120]

Culture

 
The Espoo Cultural Centre in nocturnal lighting in December 2018.
 
The WeeGee house in Tapiola, consisting of four different museums.

Espoo hosts a Museum of Modern Art called EMMA (Espoo Museum of Modern Art), built in a renovated old print house, the WeeGee house, named after an old book print company Weilin & Göös. The same building hosts also Finland's only Museum of Horology (Finnish: Kellomuseo, Swedish: Urmuseum) and a Toy Museum. Glims Farmstead Museum is also located in the city. The Espoo cultural centre, home of the world-renowned Tapiola Sinfonietta, where numerous concerts and theater performances are held, is located in Tapiola (Swedish: Hagalund). The Akseli Gallen-Kallela Museum is located in Tarvaspää and the Haltia Nature Centre is located in Nuuksio.

Espoo has several old manors of which two are open to the general public. The most important is Espoon kartano (Swedish: Esbo gård, Espoo Manor), first mentioned in maps in 1495, and belonging to the noble Ramsay family since 1756. The current main building dates back to 1914, but a mill dates from the 1750s and Finland oldest walled stone bridge from 1777 is on the King's Road (Finnish: Kuninkaantie, Swedish: Kungsvägen) which passes by the manor. The main building can be rented for weddings and similar occasions. Guided tours are available on request for groups. The other manor open to public is Pakankylän kartano, located on the northern shore of Lake Bodom. The manor hosts a restaurant and club rooms, partly with original furniture open to the public, but meant originally to Kaisankoti sanatory and old people's home located on ground of the manor.

The Metal band Children of Bodom comes from Espoo, Finland. They are named after the unsolved murder known as the Lake Bodom murders which took place at the shore of Lake Bodom, a lake in northern Espoo, in 1960. The bands Norther and Kiuas also come from Espoo.

The educational department took part in Lifelong Learning Programme 2007–2013 in Finland.

Authors in Espoo include Antti Hyry and Mauri Kunnas. Arto Paasilinna, known for his comical narrative, was nominally Espoo's prosaist. Of his novels, Elämä lyhyt, Rytkönen pitkä ("Life is short, Rytkönen is tall") features the districts of Tapiola and Haukilahti, Aatami ja Eeva ("Adam and Eve") features Otaniemi and Herranen aika ("Oh my God") features Jorvi.

Events

The district of Tapiola hosts the annual film festival Espoo Ciné and the annual music festival April Jazz. Leppävaara hosts the annual music festival Kivenlahti Rock. At wintertime, the Serena Waterpark hosts the Pacifique spa party. In summertime, the Espoo Cathedral hosts the concert event Urkuyö ja aaria, belonging to the Finland Festivals event chain. Ropecon, the largest independent role-playing game convention in Europe, was held at the Dipoli conference centre from 1998 to 2015.

The annual celebration of the Awakening movement was held in Espoo in 2008.[121]

Food culture

In the 1980s, the parish dishes of Espoo were listed as cod potatoes, fisherman's herring pan and cake à la Anna. A noteworthy menu was the dinner at the Espoo manor, including bouillon and cheese sticks, roasted veal with cream sauce, canned peas, pickled cucumbers, ice cream and canned strawberries.[122]

Cultural history

 
Rural landscape in Söderskog.
 
The Träskända manor is located in central Espoo.
 
The buildings of the Aalto University are located on the lands of the old Otnäs manor.
 
Kauppamäki in Kauklahti.

The cultural landscape in Espoo started developing in river valleys and on plantations cleared on bays revealed by upthrust of land. The largest plantations were already in the map drawn in the middle 18th century mainly in the same form as in the late 20th century. Tightly built, small groups of buildings started developing on the edges of the plantations, at some places also on hills in between them. The large landscape of Snettans and Röylä stretches to the north of Lake Bodom, with the Pakankylä manor located in its southern part. There is a significant landscape to the west of the Espoo manor,[105]: 10–11  There is a large plantation landscape stretching over the Velskola manor in northern Espoo.[105]: 272 

The large cultural landscape of Bemböle-Karvasmäki is located to the northeast of Espoon keskus and the clearly defined landscape of Söderskog is located to the south of it.[105]: 83, 140  The well preserved village landscape of Gammelgård is located on the shore of lake Pitkäjärvi in eastern Espoo.[105]: 258 

The most historically valuable landscape is located at Espoonjokilaakso near the Espoo Cathedral. The valley, surrounded by steep cliffs, was probably cleared for plantation use already in ancient times. As well as the cathedral, the landscape includes many other culturally significant buildings.[105]: 63 

The typical rural village in Espoo was small: two or three houses in an asymmetric group on a hill. A notable exception was the village of Gammelgård: the village had thirteen houses in 1540. Because of the small number houses, the Great Partition in the late 18th century had little effect on the traditional cultural landscape in Espoo. The building tradition in Espoo remained old-fashioned for a long time: low paired houses were common up to the late 19th century. The storm in August 1890 brought upon a change, when new buildings according to the style at the time were built from thousands of logs felled by the storm.[105]: 10–11 

Manor houses started appearing when one of the houses of the village grew larger than the others and developed into a riding farm, which ended up as property of the gentry. Thus almost all of the manor houses in Espoo are located at the site of an old peasant village. The Espoo manor was founded at the start of the new era, but most of the manor houses in Espoo had formed without an official founding in the late 18th century. The officers in Suomenlinna bought farms near Helsinki, resulting in so-called officer manor houses such as Bodom, Hovgård and Träskända. The late Carolinian appearance of the main buildings of the manor houses has been preserved the best in Bodom and Backby. The manor houses in Alberga and Kilo represent the style ideals of the late 19th century, while Träskända represents the start of the 20th century.[105]: 10–11 

The owners of the manor houses started selling their lands to the municipality and to construction enterprises in the 20th century. The manor houses in southern Espoo were mostly torn down to make way for new buildings and roads. The medieval Gräsa manor, the only so-called old frälse in Espoo, was located in the Olari area. Gräsa is seen as a textbook example of the rapid and fundamental change in the cultural landscape in Espoo.[105]: 157  The main buildings of the Hagalund and Matinkylä manor remain, while hardly anything remains of the Frisans and Finno manors.[105]: 162–163, 205, 311  The Soukanpohja manor is the only manor house in Espoo to remain as a contiguous group of buildings. It also forms a small rural landscape in the middle of new development in the late 20th century.[105]: 170–171 

The effect of the roads on the cultural landscape of Espoo is indisputable. Villages were founded along the King's Road and the road brought cultural influences along with it. The rural landscapes in Espoo started gradually changing in the late 19th century as new villas were founded on the coast because of regular steamship traffic. There is a well preserved summer villa milieu on the island of Iso Vasikkasaari. Many of the villas are known by their famous architects or commissioners, such as Villa Carlstedt designed by Lars Sonck.[105]: 10–11 

Many villas were also founded in Kilo and Leppävaara. The Karhusaari villa was built in southeastern Espoo in the 1890s, as well as Villa Rulludd in Kaitaa.[105]: 167, 201  The first villas in Suvisaaristo were built on the island of Tallholm in the 1860s, before that the area had mostly consisted of fishing villages.[105]: 179  The most architecturally valuable villa in Espoo is Villa Miniato in Soukka.[105]: 172 

The Pasila-Karjaa railway, completed in 1903, had a significant impact on the cultural landscape of Espoo. Industrial buildings were built near the railway stations, attracting working class settlements. The first suburban areas also appeared along the railway: tuberculosis was a common cause of death among the Finns in the early 20th century, and the dry and bright hills in Espoo along with the pines growing on them were seen as suitable to prevent and treat the disease. Espoo was seen as a healthy alternative to Helsinki, but new settlement coming from the east was diverse and new residential areas were very different from each other. The city of Kauniainen developed into a showy area, while the district of Leppävaara developed into a more modest one.[105]: 11–12 

Sports

 
Espoo Metro Areena (formerly known as Barona Areena and Länsi-Auto Areena) is a sports and entertainment centre located in Tapiolan Urheilupuisto.
 
The Leppävaara sports park.
 
The waddling pool of the Tapiola swimming pool in summer 2001. In the background are the Espoo Cultural Centre to the right and the Tapiola Central Tower to the left.
 
The indoor ice rink of Espoo Metro Areena, the home arena of Espoo Blues.

At the 1952 Summer Olympics, the city's Westend Tennis Hall hosted the fencing events.

Many world famous sportspeople are from Espoo, such as ice hockey players Teemu Selänne and Jere Lehtinen, swimmer Antti Kasvio, figure skater Laura Lepistö, javelin thrower Tiina Lillak, cross-country skier Marjo Matikainen and Formula 1 world champion Kimi Räikkönen.

Espoo is home to the Vermo race track, the Espoo Metro Areena, the sports parks of Tapiolan urheilupuisto, Leppävaaran urheilupuisto, Espoonlahden urheilupuisto as well as the Serena Waterpark. The largest swimming pools in Espoo are the Leppävaara swimming pool, the Keski-Espoo swimming pool, the Espoonlahti swimming pool and the Tapiola swimming pool. Other exercise sites include the Espoo Central Park, the Espoo outdoor islands and the outdoor exercise areas of Luukki and Pirttimäki of the city of Helsinki.

Sportsperson of the year in Espoo

Every year a sportsperson of the year is chosen in Espoo. Titleholders include the following people:

  • 2014: Gymnast Saga Hänninen, who has Down's syndrome. She competes in rhythmic gymnastics and is also active in other sports. She has won gold at the Special Olympics with her ball performance.[123]
  • 2015: Archer Jarkko Lehtinen.[124]
  • 2016: Artistic gymnast Oskar Kirmes, who achieved a record score in the Olympic tryouts in Rio de Janeiro, securing the first Olympic participation in men's artistic gymnastics for Finland in 44 years.[125]
  • 2017: Shooter Cristian Friman, who won the youths' world championship in prone rifle shooting in 2017.[126]

Ice hockey

Espoo Blues was a successful hockey club; between 1998 and 2016 it iced a men's hockey team which played at the men's premier SM-liiga and a women's hockey team which played at the women's premier Naisten SM-sarja. The women's team, Espoo Blues Naiset, won 13 Finnish women's championships in the 18-year span (1998–2016), seven of them won consecutively. The men's and women's ice hockey teams were known as Kiekko-Espoo from 1984 to 1998 and 1990 to 1998 respectively.

In spring 2016 Jääkiekko Espoo Oy, the organization which owned the clubs, declared bankruptcy.[127] A new club called Espoo United was established to replace Espoo Blues.[128] Espoo United's men's ice hockey team played at the second highest level Mestis. The Espoo United women's hockey team played at the highest level, Naisten Liiga, and won silver in the 2017 league championships. Espoo United was also active in basketball and the men's basketball team played at the second highest level; the women's basketball team played at the highest level, Naisten Korisliiga.

In August 2017, in what was described as an effort to stabilize the club's tenuous financial situation, Espoo United abandoned its women's teams in both ice hockey and basketball.[129] Espoo United's former women's basketball team quickly acquired transfer to Tapiolan Honka but the women's ice hockey team was left in an unsustainable situation.[130]

The Finnish Ice Hockey Association chose to intervene in September 2017 and created an organization that would allow the team to play under the name Espoo Blues until a better structure could be identified.[131] In April 2018, despite the dumping of its women's teams, Espoo United declared bankruptcy and its men's teams folded.[132]

In April 2019, the women's ice hockey team Espoo Blues merged with Kiekko Espoo Oy, a significant junior hockey club with the largest girls hockey program in the country, to become Kiekko-Espoo Naiset.[133] At the time of the merger, the team was the winningest team in Naisten Liiga history with 14 Naisten Liiga championships and a combined 24 Naisten Liiga championship medals over 29 seasons.

Football

FC Honka is the most successful local professional football club. The men's team was promoted into the Finnish premier division (Veikkausliiga) for the first time in its history at the end of the 2005 season. They play their home matches at Tapiolan urheilupuisto. Espoo is also home to SexyPöxyt of the fourth-tier Kolmonen league. They play their home matches at Laaksolahden urheilupuisto in the Laaksolahti district.

Floorball

Espoo also has two floorball teams playing at highest level Salibandyliiga. The two teams are Esport Oilers and Westend Indians.

Running

Espoo is home to the Länsiväyläjuoksu, an annual running event that starts and finishes in Otaniemi.[134]

Athletes from Espoo

Espoo is the birthplace of 2007 Formula One World Champion Kimi Räikkönen, former Dallas Stars forward Jere Lehtinen (three time NHL Selke Trophy winner), former Formula One driver JJ Lehto, professional downhill mountain biker Matti Lehikoinen, professional ten-pin bowling star Osku Palermaa and 2009 European Figure Skating Champion Laura Lepistö.

Parks and recreation

 
Espoo Central Park

The city's 880-hectare (2,200-acre) Central Park is located directly in the middle of the city, and it consists of natural forests, meadows, cliffs, wetlands as well as recreational routes. Central Park is the second-largest natural area in Espoo, after Nuuksio National Park, located in the northern part of the city.[59] The park consists of two separate areas, Central Park I and II, approved by the City Council in 1996 and 2004, respectively.[135]

Government and politics

 
Espoo City Hall, located in Espoon keskus

Espoo's city council has 75 members. Following the municipal election of 2017 the council seats are allocated in the following way: National Coalition Party 26 seats, Greens 17, Social Democrats 10, True Finns 7, Swedish People's Party 6, Centre Party 3, Left Alliance 3, Christian Democrats 2 and Liberal Party 1.[136]

Nationally, Espoo is a part of the constituency of Uusimaa. Support for the centre-right politics, especially the National Coalition Party, is traditionally high in Espoo. Results of the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election in Espoo:

Espoo is the home for the former Finns Party chairman Timo Soini.

Services

Education

 
The auditorium of the main building of the Helsinki University of Technology (now part of the Aalto University), designed by Alvar Aalto.

The Otaniemi campus of the Aalto University is located in Espoo, containing all six colleges of the university starting from February 2019.[137][138] Espoo is also home to the Metropolia University of Applied Sciences (formerly known as the Technical University of Applied Sciences in Espoo-Vantaa) and local colleges of the Laurea University of Applied Sciences. The musical institute Juvenalia is located near the Sello shopping centre. The Espoo Musical Institute is located in the Espoo Cultural Centre.

Healthcare

 
The Jorvi Hospital in Espoo

The Jorvi Hospital is located in Karvasmäki in Espoo, cooperating with the Helsinki University Central Hospital and belonging to the Hospital District of Helsinki and Uusimaa. There are a total of ten healthcare stations handling municipal healthcare in Espoo.

Infrastructure

 
A night-time view of the environment around Länsiväylä.
 
The Tapiola metro station has a connection to the Ainoa shopping centre.

There are two controlled-access highways going through Espoo to the west: Länsiväylä, which is part of the Finnish national road 51 between Helsinki and Karjaa, and the Finnish national road 1 going further west to Turku. These roads and other main roads leading from Helsinki to various directions are connected by the beltways Ring I and Ring III, partly located in Espoo, as well as Ring II leading from Länsiväylä to the Finnish regional road 110, located entirely in Espoo. The Finnish regional road 120 goes through northern Espoo, forming part of the old route of the Finnish national road 2.

Public transport

Espoo is well-served by public transport, through the Helsinki commuter rail network, the Helsinki Metro's Länsimetro extension opened in November 2017, and buses provided by Helsingin seudun liikenne. In 2024 the orbital Jokeri light rail line will connect Espoo to eastern Helsinki.

Data communications in Espoo have been handled by sixteen broadcast frequencies.[139]

Metro transport

 
Route map of the Länsimetro extension.

The Länsimetro extension to the Helsinki Metro was started in 2008 and the first phase was opened for traffic on 18 November 2017.[140] The first phase consists of six stations: Keilaniemi, Aalto University, Tapiola, Urheilupuisto, Niittykumpu and Matinkylä. The second phase consists of an additional five stations: Finnoo, Kaitaa, Soukka, Espoonlahti and Kivenlahti, and was originally expected to be completed in 2023 at the earliest.[141][142] The extension was completed on 3 December 2022.[143]

Railway transport

There are nine railway stations in Espoo,[144] of which only the Leppävaara railway station serves long-distance traffic.[145] The Leppävaara railway station is the busiest railway station in Espoo, with the Espoo railway station being the second busiest.[146]

The local traffic on the Rantarata railway is frequent, and the train lines are marked with letters. L trains stop at every station from Helsinki Central Station to Kirkkonummi railway station. E, U, L and X trains stop at every station in Espoo and Kauniainen except Mäkkylä railway station. Only A and L trains stop at Mäkkylä. Y trains between Helsinki Central Station and Siuntio railway station stop at Leppävaara railway station, Espoo railway station and Kauklahti railway station. A trains travel along the Leppävaara city railway with a terminus at Leppävaara. All local trains travelling through Espoo stop at Pasila railway station, with connections to Tampere and Saint Petersburg in Russia, and also at Huopalahti railway station, with a P train connection to the Helsinki Airport in northern Vantaa.[147]

Long-distance trains between Helsinki and Turku previously stopped at Espoo railway station. Starting from autumn 2015 the stop was moved to Leppävaara railway station.[148]

Bus transport

 
A bus on line 550 in Otaniemi.

Numerous bus lines serve public transport in Espoo. The Helsinki Regional Transport Authority is responsible for bus transport in Espoo, planning the routes, timetables and ticket systems.[149] Bus line 200 is the only trunk line in Espoo, travelling between Espoon keskus and the Eliel Square in central Helsinki.[150] The line has 32 stops, which is 12 stops fewer in Espoo than on the previous trunk line 235.[151]

There are a hundred accessible bus stops in Espoo. The first accessible stop was built in 2006 on Puolarintie, next to the Puolarmetsä Hospital.[152]

Bus lines in southern Espoo travel to the Matinkylä metro station and at times of heavy traffic, directly to the Kamppi Center in Helsinki. There are also internal bus lines to Tapiola. In contrast, the bus lines in central and northern Espoo travel via Töölö to the Eliel Square. All line numbers of Espoo bus lines were changed to three digits in the 2010s. Line numbers beginning with 1 mainly travel in southern Espoo and line numbers beginning with 2 in central and northern Espoo. Bus lines travelling between southern and central Espoo have numbers beginning with 5. The Joker line 550 travels between Westend and Itäkeskus bypassing the Helsinki city centre by going to the north of it.

International relations

The City of Espoo has eight official sister cities:[153]

Notable people

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In the middle of Espoo, an area that does not belong to the city is the town of Kauniainen.
  2. ^ According to tradition, a priest named Henricus was inaugurated as the first vicar of Espoo in 1458.[1][2] Although the historicity of Henricus is somewhat uncertain, the date is celebrated as the founding of the city.[1]
  3. ^ Finland Swedish: [ˈesːbo] ( listen), Standard Swedish: [ˈɛ̌sːbɔ]
  4. ^ According to a census taken in 1694, there were 817 people subject to a poll tax in the parish of Espoo. A widely used method to estimate the whole population is to add 10% to the given amount and multiply it by two, which amounts to approximately 1,800.[86]
  5. ^ The population is estimated to have fallen drastically due to the Great Famine of 1695–1697 and the Russian occupation in 1713–1721.[86]

References

Citations

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  3. ^ "Area of Finnish Municipalities 1.1.2018" (PDF). National Land Survey of Finland. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d "Preliminary population structure by area, 2021M01*-2021M12*". StatFin (in Finnish). Statistics Finland. Retrieved 2 February 2022.
  5. ^ "Population according to language and the number of foreigners and land area km2 by area as of 31 December 2008". Statistics Finland's PX-Web databases. Statistics Finland. Retrieved 29 March 2009.
  6. ^ "Population according to age (1-year) and sex by area and the regional division of each statistical reference year, 2003–2020". StatFin. Statistics Finland. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  7. ^ "List of municipal and parish tax rates in 2021" (PDF). Tax Administration of Finland. 1 December 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  8. ^ Lexico UK Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g "Information about Espoo". City of Espoo. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
  10. ^ "Väestö | Espoon kaupunki". www.espoo.fi (in Finnish). Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  11. ^ . Helsinki Region Trends. City of Helsinki. Archived from the original on 19 April 2021. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  12. ^ a b Hakanpää, Päivi (2005). "Espoon eteläosien historiallisen ajan kylänpaikkojen yleiskaavainventointi". Finnish Heritage Agency. p. 6. Retrieved 11 March 2021. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  13. ^ a b c d Kepsu, Saulo (2005). Uuteen maahan – Helsingin ja Vantaan vanha asutus ja nimistö. Suomalaisen kirjallisuuden seura. pp. 40–42. ISBN 9789517467230.
  14. ^ "Education in Espoo". Finnish Education Unit, City of Espoo. February 2018. p. 5. Retrieved 10 March 2021. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
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  24. ^ a b , city of Espoo. Accessed on 28 November 2020.
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  26. ^ Tarkka-Tierala, Hannele. "Albergan historia ulottuu 1600-luvulle". Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish). Retrieved 3 April 2021.
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Sources

  • Espoon kaupungin taskutilasto 2007, issued by the City of Espoo, 2007

External links

  • p. 50.
  • City of Espoo – Official website (in Finnish)
  • City of Espoo (Esbo) – Official website (in Swedish)
  • City of Espoo 20 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine – Official website (in English)
  • Visit Espoo Espoo for travellers (in Finnish, Swedish, and English)
  • Aalto University – Official website (in Finnish, Swedish, and English)
  • Helsinki.fi – Helsinki region in a nutshell (in Finnish, Swedish, and English)

espoo, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, finnish, january, 2017, click, sho. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Finnish January 2017 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Finnish Wikipedia article at fi Espoo see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fi Espoo to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Learn how and when to remove this template message Espoo ˈ ɛ s p oʊ 8 Finnish ˈespoː Swedish Esbo c is a city and municipality in the region of Uusimaa in the Republic of Finland It is located on the northern shore of the Gulf of Finland bordering the cities of Helsinki Vantaa Kirkkonummi Vihti and Nurmijarvi while surrounding the enclaved town of Kauniainen The city covers 528 03 square kilometres 203 9 sq mi 9 with a population of about 300 000 residents in 2022 10 making it the 2nd most populous city in Finland 4 9 Espoo forms a major part of a substantially larger metropolitan area known as Greater Helsinki home to over 1 5 million people in 2020 11 Espoo EsboCity and municipalityCity of EspooEspoon kaupunki Esbo stadFrom top left to right Downtown Matinkyla street in Espoonlahti Aalto University Auditorium Accountor Tower Espoo Cathedral Tapiola with Espoo Cultural CentreCoat of armsLocation within FinlandOpenStreetMapInteractive map outlining Espoo a Coordinates 60 12 20 N 024 39 20 E 60 20556 N 24 65556 E 60 20556 24 65556 Coordinates 60 12 20 N 024 39 20 E 60 20556 N 24 65556 E 60 20556 24 65556Country FinlandRegionUusimaaSub regionGreater HelsinkiFounded parish 1458 b Market town1963Incorporated city 1 January 1972Government City managerJukka MakelaArea 2018 01 01 3 Total528 03 km2 203 87 sq mi Land312 26 km2 120 56 sq mi Water215 88 km2 83 35 sq mi Rank230th largest in FinlandPopulation 2021 12 31 4 Total297 354 Rank2nd largest in Finland Density952 26 km2 2 466 3 sq mi Population by native language 5 Finnish83 6 official Swedish8 3 Others8 Population by age 6 0 to 1418 7 15 to 6466 2 65 or older15 Time zoneUTC 02 00 EET Summer DST UTC 03 00 EEST Municipal tax rate 7 18 ClimateDfbWebsitewww espoo fiEspoo was first settled in the Prehistoric Era with the first signs of human settlements going back as far as 8 000 years 2 but the population effectively disappeared in the early stages of the Iron Age 12 In the Early Middle Ages the area was resettled by Tavastians and Southwestern Finns 13 After the Northern Crusades Swedish settlers started migrating to the coastal areas of present day Finland and Espoo was established as a self governing Catholic parish in the 15th century In the aftermath of the Finnish War the establishment of Helsinki as the new capital of the Russian controlled Grand Duchy of Finland in 1812 greatly benefited the development of the municipality However the area remained largely agrarian until the 20th century Espoo experienced rapid urbanization and major demographic changes in the decades following World War II with Finnish superseding Swedish as the language of the majority around 1950 The municipality became a market town in 1963 and gained city status in 1972 2 The cityscape is dominated by detached housing and suburban environment 9 and the city itself is known for its large natural areas including its long shoreline 58 kilometres in total 9 and archipelago forests lakes and a national park 14 Administratively the city is divided into seven major districts and each major district is further divided into smaller districts and neighbourhoods 15 Espoo has no traditional city centre instead it has five distinct city centres Leppavaara Tapiola Matinkyla Espoon keskus and Espoonlahti and numerous local centres many of which are formed around historical manors 9 16 Aalto University is based in Otaniemi Espoo along with a thriving science community that includes numerous startups and organizations such as VTT the Technical Research Center of Finland Several major companies are based in Espoo including Nokia HMD Global Tieto KONE Neste Fortum Orion Corporation Outokumpu and Foreca as well as video game developers Rovio and Remedy Entertainment Espoo joined the UNESCO Global Network of Learning Cities in 2015 Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Prehistory 1 3 Swedish rule 1 3 1 Medieval Espoo 1 3 2 Grasa manor 1 3 3 Early modern period 1 4 Russian rule and early industrialization 1 4 1 World War I 1 5 Finnish Civil War 1 5 1 Power vacuum 1 5 1 1 Red and White Guards in Espoo 1 5 2 Red Espoo 1 5 3 After the war 1 6 20th century 1 7 Market town and city 1 8 21st century 2 Geography 2 1 General 2 2 Bedrock 2 3 Sea area 2 4 Shoreline 2 5 Continental area 2 6 Inland waters 2 7 Features 2 8 Flora and fauna 3 Climate 3 1 Temperature and rainfall 3 2 Snow conditions 3 3 Winds 3 4 Air quality 3 5 Lighting conditions 3 6 Growth season 4 Administration 4 1 Subdivisions 4 2 Municipal annexations 4 3 Organisation 4 4 City and municipal managers 4 5 City Council 5 Demographics 5 1 Language 5 2 Congregations 5 2 1 Former congregations 6 Economy 6 1 Economical history 6 2 Companies 6 3 City of Espoo 6 4 Income level 7 Culture 7 1 Events 7 2 Food culture 7 3 Cultural history 8 Sports 8 1 Sportsperson of the year in Espoo 8 2 Ice hockey 8 3 Football 8 4 Floorball 8 5 Running 8 6 Athletes from Espoo 9 Parks and recreation 10 Government and politics 11 Services 11 1 Education 11 2 Healthcare 12 Infrastructure 12 1 Public transport 12 1 1 Metro transport 12 1 2 Railway transport 12 1 3 Bus transport 13 International relations 14 Notable people 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 17 1 Citations 18 External linksHistory EditEtymology Edit Before the time of the Swedish colonization Espoo was inhabited by Tavastians a Finnish tribe and the area in which the city lies on did most likely have a different name The name of Espoo is believed to have derived from the Medieval Swedish village of Espaby or Espoby which was located in the western part of the present day city It may refer to aspens that grew on a nearby riverbank as the archaic Swedish word for the tree is aspe and the word for a river is a with the suffix by meaning village 2 17 The coat of arms of Espoo features a gold horseshoe topped by a gold crown on a blue shield The crown refers to the old kungsgard of Espoo and the horseshoe refers to the obligation to transport officials military or prisoners that parishes along the King s Road fell under Many roads in Espoo still follow the old medieval King s Road The King s Road in Finland stretching from Turku in the west to Vyborg in the east was formed in the 1340s or 1350s and was the most important road in Finland at the time 18 Prehistory Edit Present day Espoo was first settled by hunter gatherers around 8 000 years ago a few thousand years after the end of the Last Glacial Period Stone Age settlements have been found from Nuuksio and Perinki 19 Settlements from the Early Metal Age have been found from Mikkela 20 and from Morby dating from the Pre Roman Iron Age of which the latter is an important subject relating to research of cattle husbandry 21 133 Traces of early settlement in the area remain in the place names For example the original name for Soukka was Soukko 22 The first settlers lived in the northern parts of the current city around the lakes Pitkajarvi Bodomjarvi and Loojarvi as the southern parts were still largely covered by the sea In the Stone Age people in Espoo lived on south facing shores and slopes as they provided shelter from cold continental winds Living close to water bodies also made hunting and fishing easier The way of life was dictated by seasonal changes and people rarely stayed in one place throughout the year 2 During the Bronze Age c 1500 500 BCE human settlement shifted southward Known settlements from the era are few but more than 70 cairn like burial sites from the period have been discovered mostly from southern Espoo which formed an archipelago at the time When ironwork was introduced to Finland around 500 BCE it gave people access to materials that were far more versatile than materials used before However the climate grew colder at the beginning of the Iron Age 2 and it seems that human settlement in Espoo disappeared during the era 12 Only two discoveries from the time have been made in Espoo 2 Swedish rule Edit Medieval Espoo Edit Evangelical Lutheran Cathedral in Espoo originally built as a Catholic parish church in the 1480s 1 Most of the original villages of present day Espoo were founded by Tavastian Finns according to place names By the 12th century there were Tavastian houses on the shore of Kaukjarvi now known as Pitkajarvi in Kauklahti Karvasmaki Bembole Haapalahti and Finnevik 13 The first Swedish settlements in Uusimaa were established during the 12th or 13th century 19 Swedish settlers moved to the area through the current site of Kirkkonummi and then to the Esboby area From there they continued northeast to Kauklahti Bembole and Vanhakartano In later stages settlers might also have arrived in Espoo directly from Sweden most likely from Svealand The Swedish name for Espoo Esbo dates from this period The settlers changed the Finnish names used by the Tavastians to Swedish ones for example Kauklahti became Koklax and Karvasmaki became Karvasbacka The current Finnish names might also have changed from the original ones in this process For example the place name Valli might have been changed into Vallskog which has since led to the current Finnish name Velskola 13 The Swedish settlements were so extensive that the entire area became Swedish speaking except for its northernmost part and possibly the Haapalahti Makkyla area 13 147 148 Palynological analyses indicate that agriculture was already practised in Espoo around the 11th century but no historical records from the era survive 2 Until the late 13th century Espoo was part of a borderland region between the Southwestern Finns and Tavastian Finns Some artefacts found in Espoo have also been traced to ancient Savo Karelian Finnish costumes and the Late Iron Age and Early Medieval women in the area have had similar jewellery as in the region around present day Mikkeli 21 300 301 In the Middle Ages there were about 70 village lots in Espoo Ancient fields and many passageways have been discovered near the remains of ancient villages 19 Espaby at which site the Espoo manor was later founded was probably the oldest Swedish speaking village in the area The name Espoo likely refers to the name of the river Espoonjoki Swedish Esboan originally Espa Espaa which in turn is thought to have come from the aspen trees on the shores of the river the Swedish word for aspen is aspe The name was first mentioned in 1431 Originally the current river Gumbolenjoki was renamed Espoonjoki after the village located along the river When a church was founded near the village of Sodrik the name Espoonjoki was given to a river running from lake Kirkkojarvi to Kauklahti 23 Espoo became an independent parish in the 15th century Previously Espoo had been a chapel parish under Kirkkonummi The stone Espoo Cathedral was built in the 1480s by initiative from the peasants Up to the 1670s the eastern parts of Espoo belonged to the Helsinki parish after which they were officially annexed to the Espoo parish and the slottslan of Raseborg 19 After the Second Crusade to Finland settlers from Sweden established permanent agricultural settlements in Uusimaa Espoo was a subdivision of the Kirkkonummi congregation until 1486 1487 The oldest known document referring to Kirkkonummi is from 1330 Espoo as a subchapter has been dated to the 1380s although the first document directly referring to Espoo is from as late as 1431 The construction of the Espoo Cathedral the oldest preserved building in Espoo marks the independence of Espoo Administratively Espoo was a part of Uusimaa When the province was split to Eastern and Western provinces governed from the Porvoo and Raseborg castles respectively the eastern border of the Raseborg province was in Espoo The 13th century road connecting the most important cities in Finland at that time the King s Road passes through Espoo on its way from Stockholm via Turku and Porvoo to Viipuri Grasa manor Edit The oldest fralse stead in Espoo the Grasa manor apparently received fralse rights in the late 15th century 24 Grasa is one of the oldest settlements in Espoo and the oldest in southern Espoo as it was probably founded already in the early 14th century as Swedish settlement moved inland From the beginning the settlement was located at the site of the current Olari Church on both sides of the Grasanoja river The absence of Finnish names in the area reveals that the population was Swedish speaking from the beginning 24 Early modern period Edit The Royal Manor in Espoo founded by King Gustav I of Sweden in 1556 The current mansion was completed in 1797 and expanded in 1914 25 In 1556 King Gustav Vasa decided to stabilize and develop the region by founding a royal mansion in Espoo The government bought the villages of Espaby and Mankby Finnish Mankki and transferred the population elsewhere and built the royal mansion in Espaby Mankby was eventually abandoned and was never repopulated The royal mansion housed the king s local plenipotentiary vogt and collected royal tax in kind paid by labour on the mansion s farm The administrative centre Espoon keskus has grown around the church and the Espoo railway station but the municipality has retained a network like structure to the modern day In the 16th century Espoo changed into a parish of many large farmsteads The war between Sweden and Russia in the late 16th century attracted farmstead owners to found horse steads in hopes of reduced taxation Horse stead owners were required to uphold a rider in the wars fought by the realm In the late 17th century the crown had donated lands to noblemen with success in wars and during a few decades the lands in Espoo had been dealt to seven noble families 19 In the early 18th century the Great Northern War and the Great Wrath caused poverty among the people During this time many members of the estates in Espoo moved to Sweden The foundation of Sveaborg in front of Helsinki increased the traffic in Espoo and many officers bought villas in Espoo Construction of the fortress required transport of bricks from factories in Espoo In the same century agricultural novelties such as the potato and various fruits spread from the manor houses to the peasants 19 Russian rule and early industrialization Edit The Neo Renaissance Alberga Manor built by the Russian industrialist Feodor Kiseleff in the 1870s 26 The Swedish rule in Finland came to an end in 1809 when the Kingdom of Sweden ceded all of its remaining territory in Finland to the Russian Empire after the Finnish War 27 When the city of Helsinki became the capital of the newly established Grand Duchy of Finland in 1812 it brought novel developments to the neighbouring parish of Espoo Many government officials as well as members of the growing merchant class bought summer houses from Espoo 2 Russian military map showing southeastern parts of Espoo some time between 1870 and 1907 There was a great sawmill in Bastvik back in 1883 where great ships from faraway seas came to lade lumber There were many great bridges so that vessels could be laden simultaneously After bringing colonial and other necessary goods to Helsinki they came empty to Bastvik The superintendent was a German born Hoffeldt Katri Bergholm reminiscing life in Bastvik present day Saunalahti at the end of the 19th century 28 Throughout the 19th century most of Espoo s inhabitants worked in agriculture The population was around 4 000 while most of the people lived in over 60 small villages Halfway through the century almost 90 of the population spoke Swedish as their first language The wealthy estates and mansions of the parish required maids farmhands and tenant farmers as their workforce to raise cattle farm crops and raise vegetables in the kitchen gardens Fishing was also common in the coastal areas The Glims farmstead in Karvasmaki has been preserved as a museum to present rural life in Espoo during this period when industrial development was still minute in Finland 2 The rural community in Espoo began to change in the latter half of the 19th century Some brickyards had already been built in the 18th century on the grounds of Espoonkartano manor located in the western part of the present day city but it was not until the economic reforms of Emperor Alexander II that the Industrial Revolution started to gain momentum in Finland As the Russo Finnish trade legislation liberalized new brickyards were established in Espoonlahti and Kauklahti as the shores of Espoo Bay provided high quality clay for their use The bricks were mostly carried with steamboats to the neighbouring Helsinki the growing capital city of the grand duchy 2 The most prominent industrial facility in 19th century Espoo was the steam powered Bastvik Sawmill founded in 1876 28 In addition to the growing lumber and brick industries a joiners workshop was established on the island of Staffan in 1886 2 29 Staffan Island became a home for a highly skilled and renowned community of joiners colloquially known as the University of Espoo 2 or the University of Soukka 29 World War I Edit Main article Krepost Sveaborg Emperor Nicholas II of Russia Military commanders of Germany during World War I Paul von Hindenburg emperor Wilhelm II and Erich Ludendorff World War I had an effect on the Russian Empire and the Grand Duchy of Finland when the German Empire declared war on Russia on 1 August 1914 30 Russia immediately started preparing for war against Germany At the start of the war the main forces of the Russian Baltic Fleet had been concentrated at Sveaborg in front of Helsinki 31 The Russian military feared that Germany would use southern Finland to attack Petrograd so Russia started building a fortification chain of over 20 kilometres surrounding Helsinki to protect it 19 31 32 16 Construction of the fortification started in 1915 and took almost three years Construction of the fortification chain required a huge amount of workforce The construction was led by the engineering administration of Saint Petersburg but in practice the actual work was led by the engineering military staff in Sveaborg The local engineering office was located in Leppavaara in Espoo 32 17 Although the Russian military tried to keep the construction of the fortification chain secret from the enemy there are German intelligence reports with descriptions of the Russian fortification chain 32 19 Because of the lack of available workforce the Russians turned to expropriation allowed by Russian military law The manor houses in Espoo were ordered to send one man and one horse each to work on the construction The total number of workforce at the fortification is not known but the expropriation resulted in 4000 men of which 1300 were situated in Leppavaara and 1500 in Tapiola in June 1916 32 17 16 year old Annukka Koskinen who lived at the Bergans farm in Suur Leppavaara wrote about the expropriation in June 1916 32 19 It was really shameless Last year the Russians took control of three large buildings and they would have taken the last one too had we not complained to the office of the governor For all of summer they built fortifications all over the hill Trees were cut down and new ones planted in their place You know that only very few of these newly planted trees will survive This spring the soldiers have shot at our fields during practice Two days ago we received an order that the house the large woodshed and the sauna have to be empty by noon on the next day The Russian Revolution in 1917 stopped work at the fortification 19 32 20 Finland became independent in December 1917 and the fortifications were never actually needed to protect Saint Petersburg from a German attack The fortifications only ever saw action in one battle during the Finnish Civil War when the red forces in Leppavaara fought the German forces who had come to the aid of the whites on 14 April 1918 The fortifications were later used as ammunition storage and civil protection during World War II 32 20 Finnish Civil War Edit Power vacuum Edit German soldiers in Leppavaara in 1918 After the February Revolution in 1917 Finland went through a power vacuum The imperial rule had fallen general order had broken and the police had been dispensed 32 9 44 Upholding the general order moved to a local level and local militias citizens guards fire brigades and security forces were founded These forces were not originally founded for military purposes but to uphold the general order The activity was voluntary based and the forces were organised for example during strikes 32 44 In autumn 1917 the nature of the organisation became more military and the number of local workers guards increased rapidly The armed organisation was influenced by an acute lack of food disappointment with the loss of the majority position of the Social Democratic Party of Finland at the 1917 Finnish parliamentary election the Senate s desire for renovation the fight for municipal power and fear of an armed uprising of the bourgeoisie 32 44 Red and White Guards in Espoo Edit In Espoo particularly Leppavaara was a restless area The workers association of Alberga founded an unarmed militia of ten people to uphold the general order During summer and early autumn in 1917 there were local conflicts between the bourgeois guards and the workers militia In middle November the guards in Espoo on both sides had already started arming themselves In July 1917 the first bourgeois order guard was founded in Kauklahti under the guise of a voluntary fire brigade A little later a similar organisation was founded in Kilo and these organisations joined forces in August to September 32 56 The guards had about 160 members in total at this point 32 57 After the Finnish Civil War had broken out many young men left Espoo to join the White Guards all over the countryside in Uusimaa The most important of these was the Sigurds Guard in Kirkkonummi of whose members 40 came from Espoo 32 48 Red Espoo Edit At the start of the Civil War in January 1918 the Red Guards took control of Espoo There were no actual battles between the Reds and the Whites during the revolution as Espoo was in practice already under Red control 32 57 Municipal power was transferred from the municipal council and the municipal board to a social democratic municipal organisation The Reds took control without bloodshed and strengthened their position by sending patrols all around Espoo to confiscate any weapons found in the houses they visited 32 45 By order from the Finnish People s Delegation a revolutionary court was founded in Espoo with the Kauklahti based worker Aleksi Aronen serving as its judge The court sessions were held in Villa Odenwald in Kauniainen Most of the sentences given by the court were prison sentences or fines In addition the Red Guard in Leppavaara had its own comrade court The general staff of the Red Guard in Uusimaa had installed a curfew forbidding going outside after nine o clock in the evening Meetings were held in workers houses assembling lists to provide support for the Red Guards Patrols consisting of young men looking for food and weapons could take justice in their own hands in the typical form of red terror 32 46 In the spring the Reds killed nine people in Espoo of which six were civilians Rumours of these acts of violence spread out spreading fear among the people Many people saw the municipal rule of the Reds as a reign of terror 32 47 During the Civil War many bourgeois people in Espoo whom the Reds in power saw as a threat fled to neighbouring municipalities hidden cabins in the archipelago or forests in northern Espoo For example Hans Heimburger the speaker of the Espoo municipal council fled to Degero in Inkoo in January together with his family Two people from Espoo are said to have fled into caves to flee from the Red power 32 58 After the war Edit The damages of the Civil War in Espoo were minimal except for one primary school which had been hit by German bombing 33 However many houses in Espoo suffered from famine after the Civil War The war had cut off a large part of the foreign trade in Finland which worsened the famine Particularly the price of grain and other necessary foodstuffs had risen significantly which caused price limits for the most important products The situation eased out in 1919 but food regulation was only finally discontinued in 1921 32 41 After the end of the war the White Guards went out to look for Reds fled into the forests in Espoo for a long time In June 1918 the White Guards appealed to the municipal council of Espoo to ask for funds to travel to prison camps in order to provide expert help in judging reds from Espoo 12 members of the Red Guard in Espoo had been sent to prison camps 32 42 43 Under the 1918 peasant law peasants were freed from the power of their private masters which led to a widespread settlement of steadless population in Finland From 1919 to 1925 about 150 peasants and crofters in Espoo bought land for themselves with the grant given by the Finnish state The new farms thus acquired still remained small which caused the need to acquire further income through forestry and handyman work 32 42 43 20th century Edit VR Class Vk3 steam locomotive at Kauklahti railway station in the 1920s The so called Hip flask houses in Tapiola were built from 1959 to 1961 This picture is from 1967 In 1920 Espoo was only a rural municipality of about 9 000 inhabitants of whom 70 were Swedish speaking Agriculture was the primary source of income with 75 of the population making their living from farming Kauniainen was separated from Espoo in 1920 34 and it gained city rights the same year as Espoo in 1972 However the border between Espoo and Kauniainen was only defined in the late 1940s Espoo started to grow rapidly in the 1940s and 1950s Shortly after the end of the Continuation War the population of Espoo grew by four thousand as frontline soldiers and evacuees from ceded territories including the Porkkalanniemi peninsula leased to the Soviet Union between 1944 and 1956 were settled in the city 35 Espoo s location right next to the capital city of Helsinki attracted people working in the capital city to move into the rapidly growing neighbour city and already before World War II there were many suburbs along the Rantarata railway such as Leppavaara Kilo and Kauklahti which had formed into an industrial area After the new Jorvaksentie road predecessor to the Lansivayla highway was completed new detached houses were built along it particularly in Westend After the war many detached houses for soldiers having fought at the frontline were built in Espoo The highest increase in population only started in the early 1950s when the Asuntosaatio foundation started construction of the garden city of Tapiola and construction of a new campus area of the Helsinki University of Technology started in the neighbouring district of Otaniemi In the 1940s and 1950s Espoo grew more rapidly than it could afford The infrastructure of Espoo was not prepared to handle such rapid growth There was no time for proper zoning instead new houses were built as people bought lots in the city 35 A major change happened in the late 1940s as the Helsinki University of Technology moved from Hietalahti in Helsinki to larger premises in Otaniemi and the planning of the Tapiola garden city district was started As the city did not have enough money to fund the construction of the student village in Otaniemi the technical university students took to the matter to their own hands both by gathering money through various activities and taking part in the actual construction About 800 thousand bricks from the Embassy of the Soviet Union in Helsinki which had been destroyed in the bombing of Helsinki were used to build student apartments in Otaniemi 35 From 1944 to 1956 the Espoonlahti bay between Espoo and Kirkkonummi served as the border of the Porkkala Naval Base under the control of the Soviet Union A large part of Kirkkonummi as well as a narrow strip of the sea and a couple of islands in Espoo were included in the area of the naval base In Espoo the Kauklahti railway station near the border to the naval base became a tightly controlled border station between Finland and the Soviet Union The land connection to Porkkala went via the Kivenlahti bridge During the time of the naval base part of the western coast had been evacuated and the windows of the houses in the border villages on the Soviet side had to be covered during night time The windows of the trains travelling through the area rented to the Soviet Union had to be covered with wooden hatches from the outside for the duration of passage through Soviet territory and could only be reopened upon reentry to Finland Unlike the neighbouring city of Helsinki Espoo failed to develop a proper city centre forming instead into an area of multiple centres This was partly because a 1968 zoning plan where Espoo was divided into four separate areas with the administrative centre situated in Muurala later known as Espoon keskus partly because most of the land in Espoo was not actually owned by the city but was instead in private ownership directing new construction to wherever it was possible instead of using a proper zoning plan 35 The rather tightly populated districts of Tapiola and Leppavaara in eastern Espoo underwent attempts to separate from the city of Espoo from two directions on the one hand the inhabitants of the districts wanted them to become independent municipalities while on the other hand the neighbouring city of Helsinki wanted to annex the districts into Helsinki These attempts all failed and the districts remained as part of Espoo which changed from a rural municipality first to a market town in 1963 and then to a city in 1972 35 The new administrative centre of the city Espoon keskus was built in the 1970s around the Espoo railway station and the old grey stone church in Espoo The non centralised nature of Espoo led to significant differences between its districts Different parts of Espoo included the wealthy garden city district of Tapiola large areas that still remained as countryside and new suburbs such as Haukilahti Karakallio and Soukka Disagreements between different districts were common and gave Espoo a nationwide reputation of a quarrelsome municipality 35 The city quickly developed from a rural municipality into a fully fledged industrial city gaining city rights in 1972 On 1 January 1972 when Espoo gained city rights it had a population of over 100 000 making it into the fourth largest city in Finland at the time after Helsinki Turku and Tampere 35 Due to its proximity to Helsinki Espoo soon became popular amongst people working in the capital In the fifty years from 1950 to 2000 the population of Espoo grew from 22 000 to 210 000 mainly due to large scale migration from other parts of Finland Since 1945 the majority of people in Espoo have been Finnish speaking In 2006 the Swedish speaking inhabitants represented barely 9 of the total population The population growth is still continuing but at a slower rate In the summer of 2022 the population of Espoo grew to over 300 000 inhabitants 36 Market town and city Edit Espoo became a market town in 1963 The population of Espoo at the time was 65 000 About a decade later Espoo became a city in 1972 19 The districts of Suvela Olari Matinkyla and Kivenlahti were built in the 1970s The first of the high rise buildings in Keilaniemi the Neste head office was built in 1976 37 Many of the important roads in Finland go through Espoo Finland s first highway the Finnish national road 1 was built in 1962 The Ring I beltway was also built in the 1960s The next outer beltway Ring II was taken into use in 2000 19 In the original plan for the centre of the Tapiola garden city architect Aarne Ervi had reserved a space for a theatre building at the end of the fountain pool but the theatre building was never built 38 The decision to build a new cultural centre was made in a celebratory session of the Espoo city council on 1 January 1972 when Espoo became a city Two years later the first room program of the new building was completed defining its needs and surface area An architecture contest was held for its design in 1979 About 60 different proposals were submitted for the contest with architect Arto Sipinen s design Kuunsilta Moonlight bridge being chosen as the winner Construction of the Espoo Cultural Centre started in 1986 The foundation stone was laid on Jean Sibelius Day on 8 December The building was constructed of quartz sand bricks travertine tiles glass and mosaic concrete and its cost rose to about 130 million Finnish markka 38 39 The building was completed in January 1989 39 21st century Edit The Urheilupuisto metro station under construction in February 2016 By the start of the 21st century Espoo had become the second largest city in the entire country in Finland with a population of slightly over 200 thousand second only to the capital city Helsinki The Lansimetro transport line started construction in 2010 and its first stage was taken into use on 18 November 2017 40 Geography EditGeneral Edit The districts and major areas of Espoo The bare cliffs on the islands of the outer archipelago change into forested islands closer to the shore This picture shows the former fortification island of Kyto A landscape view from the Kasavuori hill in Soukka The Nuuksio national park Espoo has an area of 528 square kilometres 203 9 sq mi 312 square kilometres 120 5 sq mi 59 of land and 216 square kilometres 83 4 sq mi 41 of water Sea water makes up 37 of the total area of Espoo and inland water makes up a bit over 3 9 To the north of the lush river areas and the fields in central Espoo the archipelagal and coastal zone in southern Espoo changes into lake filled and rocky terrain At some places the lake areas in northern Espoo resemble the Finnish Lakeland The largest part of the lake ridge in Nuuksio is located in Espoo but a part of it is located in neighbouring Vihti 41 5 The largest lakes in Uusimaa Lohjanjarvi and Hiidenvesi are located west of the ridge The highest point in Espoo is Velskola at 114 2 m above sea level and the lowest point is at sea level Espoo is a part of the Greater Helsinki metropolitan region and is contiguously bordered by the cities towns and municipalities of Kirkkonummi Vihti Nurmijarvi Vantaa Kauniainen and Helsinki For a city of its size Espoo is home to exceptionally large natural areas The southern part of the city is characterized by maritime environment including a varied coastline and an archipelago consisting of 165 islands 42 Bedrock Edit The minerals and structures of the rocky and hilly topography of Espoo were formed about 1880 to 1650 million years ago Particularly the Weichselian glaciation has had an effect on the current environment the continental ice sheet withdrew from what is now Espoo about 13 thousand years ago The first areas to surface from underneath the sea were the high hills in northern Espoo such as Mustankorvenkallio 43 11 The numerous smooth cliffs on the seashore and in the archipelago were caused by wear by the continental ice sheet there are grooves on their surfaces indicating the direction of the flow of the ice sheet Icebergs split off from the ice sheet have transported glacial erratics 44 including those in Kunnarla Soukka and Suomenoja Main minerals in the Espoo bedrock include gneiss migmatite granite gabbro amphibolite and mica schist Rare orbicular granite can be found in Nuuksio the deposit is internationally valuable 43 At many places there are thick layers of clay on top of the bedrock and fields were plowed onto clay covered valleys The thickness of the clay layers was mainly formed in the Baltic Ice Lake and the Yoldia Sea 43 12 The effect of the bedrock on the traditional Espoo natural landscape was significant high and steep cliffs stand up from shallowly waving fields The oblong lakes in northern Espoo are located in valleys in the bedrock The formation of the bedrock has determined the shapes of the coastline such as Espoonlahti and Laajalahti Because of upthrust paludification of forests and overgrowth of lakes bogs and layers of peat have formed on top of the clay at some places 44 Sea area Edit The sea area of Espoo is a considerably narrow strip between the sea areas of Helsinki and Kirkkonummi 45 26 The depth of the southern part of the sea area in the outer archipelago is a few dozen metres at the most The ship route between Helsinki and Stockholm Sweden goes through the outermost parts of the sea area which contains small treeless sea washed islets One of them is the former fortification island of Kyto The smallest islands are shallow islets such as Stenskar They are significant nesting grounds for birds and many of them are nature protected areas In summertime there might be flowering meadow patches on the islands The islands closest to the Espoo shoreline include Stora Herro Pentala Kopplorna and Lehtisaaret The islands host many vacation buildings and they are often referred to as an intermediary archipelago 45 20 The islands in the inner archipelago are larger and lusher and contain boat harbours and buildings as well as permanent settlements on the islands closest to the shore There is a land connection from the mainland to the inhabited islands in Suvisaaristo and it forms a district of its own with a more rural image than most of Espoo The sea area extends inland at many places as bays of which the largest are Espoonlahti in the west and Laajalahti in the east Bays on the shoreline between them include Nuottalahti Haukilahti and Otsolahti The bays are shallow and contain many islands particularly in Espoonlahti Most of the islands in Laajalahti are located across the municipal border in Helsinki The largest peninsula in Espoo is Soukka fracturing into an archipelago in the south Thus the peninsula hardly offers any views to the open sea The nearest ship harbours are located in Helsinki while the Espoo shoreline contains many small boat harbours the largest being the boat harbour in Suomenoja 46 The maritime traffic in front of Espoo mainly consists of motor boats of various sizes water scooters and ferries handling traffic in the archipelago In terms of natural geography the coastal waters of Espoo are divided into four different sea areas consisting counting from the west of Espoonlahti Suvisaaristo Lauttasaari and Seurasaari The fourth sea area is Helsinki Porkkala to the south of the other three The surface area of the Espoonlahti sea area is 19 2 square kilometres The Espoonlahti nature preserve area is located in its northern part The western part of the sea area is located in the neighbouring municipality of Kirkkonummi The surface area of the Suvisaaristo Lauttasaari sea area is 48 5 square kilometres It reaches from the shores of the islands of Stora Herro and Pentala up to the West Harbour in Helsinki The surface area of the Seurasaari sea area is 13 1 square kilometres The Laajalahti nature preserve area is located in its northwestern part Most of the sea area is located in neighbouring Helsinki The surface area of the Helsinki Porkkala sea area is 400 5 square kilometres It reaches from the eastern shore of the Porkkalanniemi peninsula up to Suomenlinna and Santahamina Islands in the sea area include Kyto Stenskar Knapperskar and Gasgrund 47 Shoreline Edit The shoreline of Espoo is about 58 kilometres long and there are 165 islands in front of it 48 The shoreline is diverse and contains decomposing bays reed beds sandy beaches coastal cliffs and boat harbours The district of Westend contains private house lots reaching to the sea shore while the sea shore in the rest of Espoo is mainly in public use The Rantaraitti hiking route spans almost the entire sea shore of Espoo 49 The district of Kivenlahti contains coastal cliffs man made shoreline and sandy beaches The land in Espoo is rising by about a quarter of a metre per century and the moist land rise shores are slowly becoming bogs 43 12 Continental area Edit Lake Pitkajarvi in Nuuksio in northern Espoo A view of the Lansivayla highway in southern Espoo at the coast of the Gulf of Finland The river Mankinjoki flows rapidly in central Espoo There are six Natura 2000 areas in Espoo the Banberget forest area Espoonlahti Saunalahti partly located in Kirkkonummi the Laajalahti bird waters Matalajarvi Nuuksio partly located in Kirkkonummi and Vihti and the bogs groves and old forests in Vestra partly located in Vantaa 50 The forests in Espoo are mainly pine barrens consisting mostly of spruces and pines with some deciduous trees There are lush and diverse groves in some places containing many hardwood trees such as oak 51 The ecological core area of southern Espoo is the Espoo Central Park consisting mainly of two forest massives Harmaakallo and Bosmalm 52 The most famous and most popular nature area in Espoo is the Nuuksio National Park located on the lake highland of northern Espoo reaching over to Kirkkonummi and Vihti As well as the contiguous forest and pools of sweet water Nuuksio contains small bogs and meadows There are also lush grove like brook valleys in the area 53 The highest spot in Espoo Mustankorvenkallio is located in Velskola to the southwest of Saarijarvi 114 metres above sea level and over 40 metres above the water level of Saarijarvi 54 There are also considerably high spots very near the coast such as the Kasavuori hill in Soukka rising to 44 metres above sea level 55 Inland waters Edit There are over a hundred lakes and ponds in Espoo of which 73 have an area of over a hectare 41 5 56 The lakes in Espoo were formed when the land slowly started rising after the continental ice sheet had thawed and water started flowing into the crevices in the bedrock The oldest lakes in Espoo are Kalatoin Iso Majaslampi Orajarvi and Pieni Majaslampi all located over 80 metres above sea level At that time what is now the Baltic Sea was in a so called Yoldia Sea phase which had formed when the surface of the Baltic Ice Lake had lowered tens of metres in a short time Nuuksio slowly expanded into part of the mainland and new lakes were formed when the sea level sank Development stopped for about a millennium and a half when the ancient Baltic Sea changed into the Ancylus Lake Its surface was originally about 60 metres above the current sea level The Ancylus Lake formed into the salty Littorina Sea when the current Danish straits started opening up The surface of the Littorina Sea was about 34 metres above the current sea level At that time almost all lakes in northern Espoo had been separated from the sea Only the lake Nuuksion Pitkajarvi remained as a narrow fjord like bay The shore of the Littorina Sea remained at its place for a long time as upthrust slowed down Rocky rims remain of the ancient sea shore on hills and cliffs Nuuksion Pitkajarvi only separated from the sea and became an inland lake about five millennia ago About four millennia ago the land had risen so far that also Lake Bodom Lippajarvi and other pools in central Espoo changed from shallow bays into lakes 41 15 Most of the lakes in Espoo are located to the north of the Finnish national road 1 particularly in the lake highlands in Nuuksio There are three pools named Pitkajarvi long lake Pitkajarvi Nuuksion Pitkajarvi and Velskolan Pitkajarvi The largest lake in Espoo is Lake Bodom with a surface area of 4 1 square kilometres and an average depth of 4 3 metres 57 50 The largest depth of Nuuksion Pitkajarvi is 18 metres and the average depth is 6 5 metres and there are tens of lakes and ponds in its drainage basin of 60 square kilometres 57 37 There are few lakes in southern Espoo The shallow lake Hannusjarvi with a surface area of six hectares is located in Kaitaa 57 53 and the small lake Pentalanjarvi is located in the island of Pentala 57 55 Because the sweet water pools to the south of the Salpausselka ridges formed when the ancient bays separated from the sea into lakes because of upthrust only very few islands developed in them 41 15 One of the few inland islands in Espoo is an island of fifteen hectares in the lake Saarijarvi located near the border to Vihti There was a suggestion to name the rocky island covered in pine forests as Partiosaari but nothing became of this 41 61 The differences in the surface heights of the lakes in Espoo are considerable Lake Pieni Majaslampi is located the highest up 97 metres above sea level Lake Saarijarvi near it is located 25 metres lower Because of the height differences small rapids sometimes form in spring time in the creeks between adjacent water pools 58 50 Features Edit Although Espoo is relatively highly populated it has large amounts of the countryside and natural wilderness particularly in the city s western and northern portions The city has a total of 71 lakes the largest of which are Lake Bodom Nuuksion Pitkajarvi Vanhankylan Pitkajarvi Loojarvi Velskolan Pitkajarvi Saarijarvi Matalajarvi Siikajarvi and Lippajarvi The city has a large coastline on the Gulf of Finland Espoo has six Natura 2000 protected areas Banberget forests Espoonlahti Saunalahti bay area partially in Kirkkonummi Laajalahti bay Matalajarvi lake Nuuksio National Park partially in Kirkkonummi and Vihti as well as forests in Vestra partially in Vantaa The official animal of Espoo is the Siberian flying squirrel the official bird is the common blackbird and the official plant is Anemone nemorosa Flora and fauna Edit Rapids in Bembole Mallards in Matinkyla The city s Central Park s fauna represents a typical range of Finnish forest species The most common flora in the Central Park includes Equisetum ferns Anemone Lythrum and Orchidaceae Common mammal species present in Espoo include the European hare and the mountain hare the raccoon dog the red squirrel the elk the red fox various bat species the European badger as well as the roe deer and the white tailed deer 59 which was introduced to Finland in the 1930s as a gift from Finnish American migrants 60 The Suomenoja Bird Reserve in Finnoo southern Espoo is considered to be nationally significant for its bird diversity 61 Among others there are endangered moorhens as well as horned grebes and gadwalls The most common and audible maritime bird species is the black headed gull but the whooper swan is also a common sight in the city s archipelago where white tailed eagles can be found as well 61 The city is home to 73 vulnerable or endangered species 62 including the Siberian flying squirrel whose Finnish populations have experienced a steep decline for many decades due to logging The flying squirrel is considered to be the official animal of Espoo 63 and the squirrel populations are especially plentiful in the northernmost parts of the city However the flying squirrel is also present in some southern areas including the Central Park Soukka Espoon keskus Tapiola Laajalahti Hannusmetsa and Matinkyla 64 Climate EditTemperature and rainfall Edit Spring May Day celebrations in the Puropuisto park in Soukka Summer Piispansilta in Matinkyla Autumn Suvisaaristo viewed from the north Winter Boats on the shore of Lake Bodom Espoo s location in the northern latitudes between the large continent of Eurasia and the even larger Atlantic Ocean causes rapid changes in the weather in Espoo The height of the terrain from sea level also has an effect on the climate most of the people in Espoo live south of Lake Bodom where the terrain only rises over 50 metres above sea level in a few spots There are no proper plateaus in northern Espoo either the terrain rises a bit over 100 metres above sea level at the most Espoo is located in a hemiboreal zone also known as the oak zone The most important factor affecting the environment is the Gulf of Finland cooling the weather down in summer and warming it up in autumn The coastal convergence increases rainfall going inward into the mainland The local climate in Nuuksio is different from the rest of Espoo the terrain in Nuuksio rises up from almost all directions which causes a forced rise upwards in air currents which in turn has an effect on the clouds The ridge in Nuuksio has the highest rainfall in all of Finland The climate in Nuuksio is also affected by the fractionate terrain causing friction increasing rainfall In 1981 the rainfall in Nupuri was measured as 1 109 millimetres an all time record in Finland 65 In southern Espoo the area of Suurpelto is slightly cooler than its surroundings 66 Although Espoo is the second largest city in Finland its meteorological averages have not been measured At the weather stations in the neighbouring municipalities the average temperature from 1981 to 2010 was about 5 to 6 degrees Celsius The coldest time of the year was from January to February and the warmest time was from July to August The temperature differences between the seasons grow smaller when moving out towards the sea On the coast and in the archipelago the temperature rarely rises above 30 degrees or falls below 20 degrees The average rainfall is from 600 to 700 millimetres per year The driest season is in springtime and the rainiest season is in August and from October to December The most of the rainy days occur in autumn 67 The Finnish Meteorological Institute has eight outposts in Espoo Friisila Kivenlahti Kyto Leppavaara Luukki Nuuksio Otaniemi and Tapiola Of these Nuuksio and Tapiola are weather outposts taken into use in the 2010s The Nuuksio outpost is located in a sparsely populated and fractionate lake ridge 90 metres above sea level The Tapiola outpost is located in a suburb on the coast of the Gulf of Finland 6 metres above sea level 68 Snow conditions Edit On average snow first falls on Espoo after Christmas and melts away from late March to early April The snow conditions vary more on the coast than inland On some years the snow may last up to five months while on some years there might be hardly any snow during the entire winter Lows coming from the southwest carry temperate air which can keep the snow layers thin or even melt the snow away 65 Winds Edit Especially at springtime the sea wind blows clouds into inland This picture shows a view of the street Olarinkatu to the north Birch trees usually grow dogears around May Day The dominant wind direction sector in Espoo is south west like in Finland in general 69 The sea wind has a large effect on the local winds on the coast and can even create its own wind field It can change the direction and speed of the basic wind on the coast for many times during the same day Particularly in springtime and early summertime the sea wind keeps the archipelago and coastline free of clouds while there is a white cloud wall further inland which can cause rain showers 70 Air quality Edit The air quality in Espoo is considerably good despite the negative effect of the traffic Particularly on pedestrian roads sand is used to combat slipperiness which causes a major dust problem in springtime Studded tires also contribute to the number of harmful particles The air quality in Espoo is measured in Leppavaara and Luukki There are also mobile measurement stations 71 72 Alder and birch pollen has a harmful effect on the air quality in springtime hay and mugwort in summertime 73 Lighting conditions Edit Espoo is located at a latitude of 60 degrees north which causes the duration of daylight to vary considerably At summer solstice daylight lasts for nineteen hours while at winter solstice it only lasts for six hours The angle of the sun is at its highest at 53 4 degrees in summertime and only at 6 6 degrees in wintertime Espoo is among the northernmost places to have nautical dusk even at summer solstice meaning the sun is at least six degrees below the horizon at the darkest hour of the night 74 At that time there is no total darkness during the entire night In contrast daylight at winter solstice is short especially when there are only few sunny hours from November to January 74 Shadows cast by buildings are long even at summertime They are at their shortest at summer solstice about 75 percent of the height of the buildings For example the shadow of Niittyhuippu is 63 metres long at the time At noon at winter solstice the shadows can be up to 8 8 times the height of the entire building For example the shadow of the Tapiola Central Tower is 430 metres long at the time 75 The official time in Espoo is measured by the 30th eastern meridian The city is located over five degrees west of it so the solar noon occurs over 20 minutes later than on the 30th meridian Growth season Edit Espoo is located at the plant success zone 1b The thermal growth season lasts for a bit over half a year on average In general the growth season starts in April and ends in October Sometimes it continues to early November The sum of the effective temperature during the thermal growth season is over 1 400 degrees Celsius times day and annual variations are large 76 Administration EditEspoo belongs to the region of Uusimaa Supreme decision making power in the city is held by the City Council of Espoo The council has 75 members elected for a period of four years Subdivisions Edit A high rise building in Kivenlahti Nuuksio National Park in autumn Main article Districts of Espoo Espoo is divided into seven major areas Finnish suuralueet Swedish storomraden Vanha Espoo with administrative center Suur Espoonlahti Pohjois Espoo Suur Kauklahti Suur Leppavaara Suur Matinkyla and Suur Tapiola of which Suur Leppavaara has the highest population These major areas are then divided into a total of 56 districts 77 The healthcare social cultural and school services of the city have been concentrated to the regional centres in the major areas Statistics about Espoo also include the division other which included 4 582 people on New Year 2022 From 2011 to 2022 the population growth was the highest in Suur Kauklahti about 70 The growth in Suur Matinkyla was about 27 while Suur Tapiola and Suur Leppavaara grew by about 20 The population in Suur Espoonlahti and Vanha Espoo grew by about 12 to 13 and that in Pohjois Espoo by about 10 78 79 The postal codes in Espoo start with the digits 02 like in Kauniainen Kirkkonummi and Siuntio as well Espoo includes the postal codes 02100 to 02380 02600 to 02860 excluding 02700 Kauniainen and 02920 to 02980 The lowest postal codes are located in the south and the highest ones in the north Municipal annexations Edit In connection to the municipal renewal plan in Finland there have been suggestions to annex Espoo into the rest of the Finnish capital region together with some of the surrounding municipalities 80 So far the City Council of Espoo has strongly opposed these suggestions 81 Organisation Edit The city of Espoo has three industries and one result area Result area of vitality Led by Mervi Heinaro 82 Industry of growth and education Led by Harri Rinta Aho 82 Industry of welfare Led by Sanna Svahn 82 Industry of technology and the environment Led by Olli Isotalo 82 City and municipal managers Edit Jukka Makela the city manager of Espoo at Espoo Day 2019 The office of a municipal manager was introduced to the rural municipalities in Finland through the 1948 municipal law but in Espoo this office was only first fulfilled in 1962 one year before Espoo became a market town Before this the duties of the municipal manager were handled by the speaker of the municipal council 83 Municipal managers of Espoo include Arvi E Heiskanen 1962 1963 Teppo Tiihonen 1963 1985 Pekka Loyttyniemi 1985 1995 Marketta Kokkonen 1995 2010 Jukka Makela 2011 City Council Edit Politically Espoo is a clearly bourgeois city with the largest party being the National Coalition Party Support of the Green League and the Swedish People s Party of Finland is also larger in Espoo than the average of Finland citation needed The parties with the largest increase in support in the 2010s were the Green League and Movement Now 84 85 Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 1694 d 1 800 1721 e 1 500 16 7 17491 900 26 7 18253 600 89 5 18654 000 11 1 19015 888 47 2 19107 891 34 0 19208 817 11 7 193011 370 29 0 194013 378 17 7 195022 878 71 0 196053 042 131 8 197092 655 74 7 1975120 632 30 2 1980137 409 13 9 1985156 778 14 1 1990172 629 10 1 1995191 247 10 8 2000213 271 11 5 2005231 704 8 6 2010247 970 7 0 2015269 802 8 8 2020292 796 8 5 2021297 132 1 5 2030 331 612 11 6 2040 354 571 6 9 population prediction Source 1694 1865 86 Statistics Finland 4 87 The population of Espoo between 1900 and 2040 In 2020 Espoo had a population of 292 796 residents an 18 increase over 2010 4 9 The city is the 7th most densely populated in Finland The population by citizenship in 2018 was 89 1 Finnish and 10 9 other nationalities Religious affiliation was 53 6 Lutheran 4 3 other and 42 1 no religious affiliation Espoo contains many high income suburbs and six out of the ten highest average income postal code areas in Finland are in Espoo citation needed In Espoo the average income of foreign speaking men was 35 000 annually and for women 22 000 in 2018 In Helsinki the figure is 30 000 for men and 21 000 for women In total the average income in Espoo including foreign speakers was over 42 000 in 2018 88 In 2021 there were 59 837 residents with a foreign background 20 of the population 89 The largest groups are from Estonia Russia and Iraq Largest groups of foreign residents 90 Nationality Population 2021 Russia 8 445 2 8 Estonia 6 269 2 1 Iraq 3 943 1 3 India 3 613 1 2 China 3 393 1 1 Somalia 3 047 1 0 Yugoslavia 2 861 1 0 Iran 1 819 0 6 Afghanistan 1 627 0 5 Philippines 1 599 0 5 Vietnam 1 514 0 5 Sweden 1 492 0 5 Pakistan 1 282 0 4 Turkey 1 040 0 4Language Edit A high rise building in Kivenlahti A landscape in Espoonkartano on the Sagbro bridge Population by mother tongue Finnish 73 2 Swedish 6 7 Russian 2 8 Estonian 1 9 Arabic 1 7 English 1 3 Chinese 1 2 Somali 1 0 Other 10 2 The City of Espoo is officially bilingual In 2021 the majority of the population 73 2 spoke Finnish as their first language and 6 7 spoke Swedish The number of people speaking Sami the third official language in Finland was sixteen people About 20 of Espoo s population has a first language other than Finnish or Swedish 89 The number of foreign language speakers in Espoo is smaller than in Vantaa but larger than in Helsinki 90 According to an estimate the number of foreign language speakers will rise to 30 of the city s population by 2030 and in 2027 almost a half 43 3 of the people of 35 to 64 years in Espoo is estimated to be a foreign language speaker 91 The proportion of Swedish speakers decreased the most in the 1950s in the 1950s Swedish speakers amounted to 43 1 of the population about 10 800 people 92 while in 1960 they amounted to 23 5 about 13 300 people 93 This was caused by the rapid urbanization which lead to a strong positive immigration of Finnish speakers from other parts of the country The number of Swedish speakers slowly increased up to the 2010s when they numbered about 20 300 while the proportion has decreased year by year In 1996 the proportion fell below 10 By the 2020s the proportion of Swedish speakers in Espoo was about 7 of the population By absolute numbers Espoo was the second most Swedish speaking municipality in Finland after Helsinki before Raseborg Vaasa Porvoo and Korsholm 90 In 2018 the largest proportions of Swedish speakers in Espoo were in Suvisaaristo 33 6 Espoonkartano 29 9 Sepankyla 24 1 and Bodom 21 3 94 By absolute numbers the most Swedish speakers lived in Haukilahti 993 people and Matinkyla 813 people 94 The proportion of Finnish speakers has decreased significantly during the last two decades In 1999 the proportion of Finnish speakers was 88 and in 2021 it was about 73 90 The proportion of foreign language speakers has increased drastically in 1999 it was about 4 and in 2021 about 20 The foreign language speakers in Espoo are a heterogeneous group divided into tens of different languages of which the Russian speakers form the largest part amounting to about 3 of the population in 2021 The proportion of foreign language speakers in Espoo was slightly higher than the average in Uusimaa 90 In 2019 there were 33 576 foreign citizens in Espoo about 11 6 of the population 95 Congregations Edit The Olari Church At the end of the year 2019 57 1 percent of Espoo s population belonged to the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland 96 According to the 2018 division Espoo is home to the following Evangelical Lutheran congregations 97 Espoonlahti congregation formerly known as the Kivenlahti congregation Espoo cathedral congregation formerly known as the Kanta Espoo congregation Leppavaara congregation Olari congregation Tapiola congregation Esbo svenska forsamlingTogether these congregations form the Espoo Congregation Union Finnish Espoon seurakuntayhtyma Swedish Esbo kyrkliga samfallighet In 2003 of the population of Espoo 79 5 percent belonged to the Evangelical Lutheran Church 18 0 percent did not belong to any religious organisation 1 2 percent belonged to the Orthodox Church of Finland 0 4 percent were Catholic and 0 2 percent were Jehovah s Witnesses Members of the Evangelical Free Church of Finland Mormons Jews Muslims other Orthodox and Methodists amounted to 0 1 percent each 98 There are five Lutheran churches in Espoo each Finnish speaking congregation has one including the Espoo Cathedral the Espoonlahti Church the Olari Church the Tapiola Church and the Leppavaara Church There are also 27 chapels of the Lutheran Church in Espoo 99 Of the Orthodox congregations in Finland the Helsinki Orthodox Congregation is active in Espoo 100 It has the Church of the Sanctifier Herman of Alaska in Tapiola 101 Of the congregations of the Pentecostal Church of Finland the Pentecostal Congregation of Espoo is active in Espoo Individual Pentecostal congregations in Espoo include the Espoonlahti Pentecostal congregation the Keski Espoo near congregation the Leppavaara Missionary chapel and Mankby bibliska forsamling 102 Of the congregations of the Evangelical Free Church of Finland the Espoo free congregation is active in Espoo 103 Former congregations Edit Former congregations in the current area of the city of Espoo include The Espoo congregation split into the Finnish and Swedish speaking congregations of Espoo in 1950 The Espoo Finnish congregation split into the congregations of southern Espoo Espoo proper and Leppavaara in 1964 the Tapiola congregation split off in 1960 The congregation of southern Espoo split into the Kivenlahti and Olari congregations in 1975 Economy EditEconomical history Edit In addition to fields many buildings remain of rural Espoo such as the Punainen tupa red house in Henttaa Office buildings in Keilaniemi The shopping centre Iso Omena opened in 2001 is located in Matinkyla near the sea shore The Suomenoja power plant Still in the middle 19th century Espoo was a rural community living in subsistence economy There was hardly any industry the villages were small and situated evenly across different parts of the parish There was some population concentration at the location of the current district of Espoon keskus and along the Suuri Rantatie road and some dense population on the shore of the Gulf of Finland In 1865 farming was the primary source of income for about 90 of the men in Espoo There were about seventy craftsmen and about twenty people working in the industry Of the women in Espoo over one fifth worked as maids 104 48 The economical history of 19th century Espoo also includes some small scale mining activity There was ore mining at the lands of the Kilo mansion around 1840 and this activity continued to the 1850s The ore was of good quality but poor and the ore streaks were fragmentary In the end the amount of ore mined from Kilo was very small 105 108 A new discovery of ore was made at the lands of the Alberga manor in the early 1840s At most seven people worked at the site but the amount of ore mined in Alberga ended up very small as well The mining activity slowly waned and stopped completely in 1851 105 116 The Espoo parish was not a neighbour of the city of Helsinki in the 19th century there were lands of the Helsinki parish in between The rapid growth of Helsinki attracted people from Espoo despite the short distance travel between Espoo and Helsinki was so slow that moving into Helsinki was almost unavoidable if one happened to get a job there 104 49 The rapid growth of Helsinki started also showing outside the administrative borders of the city The first industrial area in Espoo was born near the shore of the Espoonlahti bay In the late 19th century there were three brick factories and a steam powered sawmill in the area Clay from the Espoonlahti bay was well suited for making bricks and the bricks were easy to transport to Helsinki over sea For example the Uspenski Cathedral in Katajanokka has been built from bricks from the Stensvik brick factory The village of Mulby Muulo in Finnish became the industrial centre of Espoo and its population grew manifold Other villages in southwestern Espoo also grew through the industry When the Rantarata railway was completed in the early 20th century part of the industry moved to the railway track and the railway also enabled people to commute for work from Espoo to Helsinki 104 49 58 106 7 There was also glass industry in Espoo Pehr Appelgren founded a bottle glass factory near the Espoo railway station in 1912 The factory closed down in 1922 The Kauklahti glass factory started in 1923 and by the 1930s it was the largest illumination glass factory in Finland The factory closed down in 1951 Glass industry in Espoo altogether waned in the 1950s 104 59 60 By the late 1930s there were about thirty businesses in Espoo In addition to glass and brick industry the parish included machinery workshops sawmills and metallurgy workshops There was industrial clothing manufacturing in Kauklahti and a clock factory in Viherlaakso The steam powered sawmill in Bastvik founded in 1876 was economically quite stable its saw equipment was moved to the Hanko Peninsula in the 20th century 104 58 61 The merchant F F Sjoblom founded the first shop in Espoo in Stensvik soon after founding of shops had been liberated in 1868 At the time when Finland became independent there were about 40 shops in Espoo most of them general stores 104 62 Despite the increase in industry and service jobs Espoo was still a predominantly rural parish in 1920 About two thirds of the population got their primary income from farming 104 53 Rye and barley had been the primary crops in Espoo for centuries By the 20th century the significance of cattle herding increased and the farming of oats became more popular 104 32 55 Construction and services became the basis of the economy in Espoo in the 1950s when the rapid growth in population in Espoo started In the 2010s the primary industries counting by number of jobs are trade accommodation and food and beverage industry as well as specialist services The proportion of information and communications technology is about one tenth About one sixth of the jobs are in industry and construction The public sector is large about one quarter of jobs were in the public sector in the middle 2010s 106 17 The transition from a medieval rural parish into an integral part of the Helsinki metropolitan area has dropped the proportion of farming and forestry jobs to about a fifth of a percent 106 17 Companies Edit Espoo is home to the head offices of several global companies and many high technology companies The Aalto University campus in southeastern Espoo is at the heart of research and development 107 The head offices of Nokia Fortum Neste Huhtamaki Metsa Board Orion Oriola Outotec and LahiTapiola are located in Espoo 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 The largest shopping centres in Espoo are Iso Omena Sello Lippulaiva Entresse and Ainoa Along the continuous traffic route formed by Merituulentie to the north of Lansivayla Kuitinmaentie and Martinsillantie are located the shopping centre Niitty Lansikeskus the retail park Merituuli the shopping centre Liila as well as several leisure indoor decoration and automobile businesses The small shopping centre Suuris opened in 2017 is located in Suurpelto along Ring II Industrial areas in Espoo include Juvanmalmi Karamalmi and Kivenlahti City of Espoo Edit The city of Espoo funds its services mainly by taxation In 2021 the tax income of the city consisting of the municipal tax the communal tax and the property tax amounted to 1 711 million euro 116 with the municipal tax rate being 18 00 percent 117 By number of employees the city of Espoo is the biggest employer in Espoo in 2016 it employed about 14 thousand people 118 The economy in Espoo leaves a surplus but this is not enough to finance the investments of the growing city 117 Espoo has signed the principles of responsible investment of the United Nations The city of Espoo has five investment funds the basic services and land acquisition fund the development fund of basic services the development fund of entrepreneurship and employment the investment fund and the accident fund 117 A characteristic feature of Espoo is that the city manages its investments through its daughter companies 117 Income level Edit The average income level in Espoo is higher than that in the rest of the capital region and particularly higher than that in the rest of Finland In 2015 the taxable income in Espoo was 40 higher than in the rest of Finland The unemployment rate in Espoo is high but still lower than the average in Finland 119 The highest income areas in Espoo such as Westend and Haukilahti are mainly located on the coast These districts are part of the Tapiola major district whose income level is significantly higher than the average in Espoo The income level in the Matinkyla and Espoonlahti major districts is near the average in Espoo The income level in the Leppavaara major district and particularly in the Vanha Espoo major district is lower than the average in Espoo 120 The city of Espoo is not particularly segregated by major districts instead the differences in income are significantly higher within the major districts as between them In low come major districts the average income level is near the average in Helsinki In some areas such as in Kivenlahti and Suvela it even falls below the average in Vantaa Areas consisting of detached houses generally have higher income levels than areas consisting of apartment buildings 120 Culture Edit The Espoo Cultural Centre The Espoo Cultural Centre in nocturnal lighting in December 2018 The WeeGee house in Tapiola consisting of four different museums Espoo hosts a Museum of Modern Art called EMMA Espoo Museum of Modern Art built in a renovated old print house the WeeGee house named after an old book print company Weilin amp Goos The same building hosts also Finland s only Museum of Horology Finnish Kellomuseo Swedish Urmuseum and a Toy Museum Glims Farmstead Museum is also located in the city The Espoo cultural centre home of the world renowned Tapiola Sinfonietta where numerous concerts and theater performances are held is located in Tapiola Swedish Hagalund The Akseli Gallen Kallela Museum is located in Tarvaspaa and the Haltia Nature Centre is located in Nuuksio Espoo has several old manors of which two are open to the general public The most important is Espoon kartano Swedish Esbo gard Espoo Manor first mentioned in maps in 1495 and belonging to the noble Ramsay family since 1756 The current main building dates back to 1914 but a mill dates from the 1750s and Finland oldest walled stone bridge from 1777 is on the King s Road Finnish Kuninkaantie Swedish Kungsvagen which passes by the manor The main building can be rented for weddings and similar occasions Guided tours are available on request for groups The other manor open to public is Pakankylan kartano located on the northern shore of Lake Bodom The manor hosts a restaurant and club rooms partly with original furniture open to the public but meant originally to Kaisankoti sanatory and old people s home located on ground of the manor The Metal band Children of Bodom comes from Espoo Finland They are named after the unsolved murder known as the Lake Bodom murders which took place at the shore of Lake Bodom a lake in northern Espoo in 1960 The bands Norther and Kiuas also come from Espoo The educational department took part in Lifelong Learning Programme 2007 2013 in Finland Authors in Espoo include Antti Hyry and Mauri Kunnas Arto Paasilinna known for his comical narrative was nominally Espoo s prosaist Of his novels Elama lyhyt Rytkonen pitka Life is short Rytkonen is tall features the districts of Tapiola and Haukilahti Aatami ja Eeva Adam and Eve features Otaniemi and Herranen aika Oh my God features Jorvi Events Edit Serena Waterpark in Lahnus Espoo The district of Tapiola hosts the annual film festival Espoo Cine and the annual music festival April Jazz Leppavaara hosts the annual music festival Kivenlahti Rock At wintertime the Serena Waterpark hosts the Pacifique spa party In summertime the Espoo Cathedral hosts the concert event Urkuyo ja aaria belonging to the Finland Festivals event chain Ropecon the largest independent role playing game convention in Europe was held at the Dipoli conference centre from 1998 to 2015 The annual celebration of the Awakening movement was held in Espoo in 2008 121 Food culture Edit In the 1980s the parish dishes of Espoo were listed as cod potatoes fisherman s herring pan and cake a la Anna A noteworthy menu was the dinner at the Espoo manor including bouillon and cheese sticks roasted veal with cream sauce canned peas pickled cucumbers ice cream and canned strawberries 122 Cultural history Edit Rural landscape in Soderskog The Traskanda manor is located in central Espoo The buildings of the Aalto University are located on the lands of the old Otnas manor Kauppamaki in Kauklahti The cultural landscape in Espoo started developing in river valleys and on plantations cleared on bays revealed by upthrust of land The largest plantations were already in the map drawn in the middle 18th century mainly in the same form as in the late 20th century Tightly built small groups of buildings started developing on the edges of the plantations at some places also on hills in between them The large landscape of Snettans and Royla stretches to the north of Lake Bodom with the Pakankyla manor located in its southern part There is a significant landscape to the west of the Espoo manor 105 10 11 There is a large plantation landscape stretching over the Velskola manor in northern Espoo 105 272 The large cultural landscape of Bembole Karvasmaki is located to the northeast of Espoon keskus and the clearly defined landscape of Soderskog is located to the south of it 105 83 140 The well preserved village landscape of Gammelgard is located on the shore of lake Pitkajarvi in eastern Espoo 105 258 The most historically valuable landscape is located at Espoonjokilaakso near the Espoo Cathedral The valley surrounded by steep cliffs was probably cleared for plantation use already in ancient times As well as the cathedral the landscape includes many other culturally significant buildings 105 63 The typical rural village in Espoo was small two or three houses in an asymmetric group on a hill A notable exception was the village of Gammelgard the village had thirteen houses in 1540 Because of the small number houses the Great Partition in the late 18th century had little effect on the traditional cultural landscape in Espoo The building tradition in Espoo remained old fashioned for a long time low paired houses were common up to the late 19th century The storm in August 1890 brought upon a change when new buildings according to the style at the time were built from thousands of logs felled by the storm 105 10 11 Manor houses started appearing when one of the houses of the village grew larger than the others and developed into a riding farm which ended up as property of the gentry Thus almost all of the manor houses in Espoo are located at the site of an old peasant village The Espoo manor was founded at the start of the new era but most of the manor houses in Espoo had formed without an official founding in the late 18th century The officers in Suomenlinna bought farms near Helsinki resulting in so called officer manor houses such as Bodom Hovgard and Traskanda The late Carolinian appearance of the main buildings of the manor houses has been preserved the best in Bodom and Backby The manor houses in Alberga and Kilo represent the style ideals of the late 19th century while Traskanda represents the start of the 20th century 105 10 11 The owners of the manor houses started selling their lands to the municipality and to construction enterprises in the 20th century The manor houses in southern Espoo were mostly torn down to make way for new buildings and roads The medieval Grasa manor the only so called old fralse in Espoo was located in the Olari area Grasa is seen as a textbook example of the rapid and fundamental change in the cultural landscape in Espoo 105 157 The main buildings of the Hagalund and Matinkyla manor remain while hardly anything remains of the Frisans and Finno manors 105 162 163 205 311 The Soukanpohja manor is the only manor house in Espoo to remain as a contiguous group of buildings It also forms a small rural landscape in the middle of new development in the late 20th century 105 170 171 The effect of the roads on the cultural landscape of Espoo is indisputable Villages were founded along the King s Road and the road brought cultural influences along with it The rural landscapes in Espoo started gradually changing in the late 19th century as new villas were founded on the coast because of regular steamship traffic There is a well preserved summer villa milieu on the island of Iso Vasikkasaari Many of the villas are known by their famous architects or commissioners such as Villa Carlstedt designed by Lars Sonck 105 10 11 Many villas were also founded in Kilo and Leppavaara The Karhusaari villa was built in southeastern Espoo in the 1890s as well as Villa Rulludd in Kaitaa 105 167 201 The first villas in Suvisaaristo were built on the island of Tallholm in the 1860s before that the area had mostly consisted of fishing villages 105 179 The most architecturally valuable villa in Espoo is Villa Miniato in Soukka 105 172 The Pasila Karjaa railway completed in 1903 had a significant impact on the cultural landscape of Espoo Industrial buildings were built near the railway stations attracting working class settlements The first suburban areas also appeared along the railway tuberculosis was a common cause of death among the Finns in the early 20th century and the dry and bright hills in Espoo along with the pines growing on them were seen as suitable to prevent and treat the disease Espoo was seen as a healthy alternative to Helsinki but new settlement coming from the east was diverse and new residential areas were very different from each other The city of Kauniainen developed into a showy area while the district of Leppavaara developed into a more modest one 105 11 12 Sports Edit Espoo Metro Areena formerly known as Barona Areena and Lansi Auto Areena is a sports and entertainment centre located in Tapiolan Urheilupuisto Tapiolan Urheilupuisto stadium in Tapiola The Leppavaara sports park The waddling pool of the Tapiola swimming pool in summer 2001 In the background are the Espoo Cultural Centre to the right and the Tapiola Central Tower to the left The indoor ice rink of Espoo Metro Areena the home arena of Espoo Blues At the 1952 Summer Olympics the city s Westend Tennis Hall hosted the fencing events Many world famous sportspeople are from Espoo such as ice hockey players Teemu Selanne and Jere Lehtinen swimmer Antti Kasvio figure skater Laura Lepisto javelin thrower Tiina Lillak cross country skier Marjo Matikainen and Formula 1 world champion Kimi Raikkonen Espoo is home to the Vermo race track the Espoo Metro Areena the sports parks of Tapiolan urheilupuisto Leppavaaran urheilupuisto Espoonlahden urheilupuisto as well as the Serena Waterpark The largest swimming pools in Espoo are the Leppavaara swimming pool the Keski Espoo swimming pool the Espoonlahti swimming pool and the Tapiola swimming pool Other exercise sites include the Espoo Central Park the Espoo outdoor islands and the outdoor exercise areas of Luukki and Pirttimaki of the city of Helsinki Sportsperson of the year in Espoo Edit Every year a sportsperson of the year is chosen in Espoo Titleholders include the following people 2014 Gymnast Saga Hanninen who has Down s syndrome She competes in rhythmic gymnastics and is also active in other sports She has won gold at the Special Olympics with her ball performance 123 2015 Archer Jarkko Lehtinen 124 2016 Artistic gymnast Oskar Kirmes who achieved a record score in the Olympic tryouts in Rio de Janeiro securing the first Olympic participation in men s artistic gymnastics for Finland in 44 years 125 2017 Shooter Cristian Friman who won the youths world championship in prone rifle shooting in 2017 126 Ice hockey Edit Espoo Blues was a successful hockey club between 1998 and 2016 it iced a men s hockey team which played at the men s premier SM liiga and a women s hockey team which played at the women s premier Naisten SM sarja The women s team Espoo Blues Naiset won 13 Finnish women s championships in the 18 year span 1998 2016 seven of them won consecutively The men s and women s ice hockey teams were known as Kiekko Espoo from 1984 to 1998 and 1990 to 1998 respectively In spring 2016 Jaakiekko Espoo Oy the organization which owned the clubs declared bankruptcy 127 A new club called Espoo United was established to replace Espoo Blues 128 Espoo United s men s ice hockey team played at the second highest level Mestis The Espoo United women s hockey team played at the highest level Naisten Liiga and won silver in the 2017 league championships Espoo United was also active in basketball and the men s basketball team played at the second highest level the women s basketball team played at the highest level Naisten Korisliiga In August 2017 in what was described as an effort to stabilize the club s tenuous financial situation Espoo United abandoned its women s teams in both ice hockey and basketball 129 Espoo United s former women s basketball team quickly acquired transfer to Tapiolan Honka but the women s ice hockey team was left in an unsustainable situation 130 The Finnish Ice Hockey Association chose to intervene in September 2017 and created an organization that would allow the team to play under the name Espoo Blues until a better structure could be identified 131 In April 2018 despite the dumping of its women s teams Espoo United declared bankruptcy and its men s teams folded 132 In April 2019 the women s ice hockey team Espoo Blues merged with Kiekko Espoo Oy a significant junior hockey club with the largest girls hockey program in the country to become Kiekko Espoo Naiset 133 At the time of the merger the team was the winningest team in Naisten Liiga history with 14 Naisten Liiga championships and a combined 24 Naisten Liiga championship medals over 29 seasons Football Edit FC Honka is the most successful local professional football club The men s team was promoted into the Finnish premier division Veikkausliiga for the first time in its history at the end of the 2005 season They play their home matches at Tapiolan urheilupuisto Espoo is also home to SexyPoxyt of the fourth tier Kolmonen league They play their home matches at Laaksolahden urheilupuisto in the Laaksolahti district Floorball Edit Espoo also has two floorball teams playing at highest level Salibandyliiga The two teams are Esport Oilers and Westend Indians Running Edit Espoo is home to the Lansivaylajuoksu an annual running event that starts and finishes in Otaniemi 134 Athletes from Espoo Edit Espoo is the birthplace of 2007 Formula One World Champion Kimi Raikkonen former Dallas Stars forward Jere Lehtinen three time NHL Selke Trophy winner former Formula One driver JJ Lehto professional downhill mountain biker Matti Lehikoinen professional ten pin bowling star Osku Palermaa and 2009 European Figure Skating Champion Laura Lepisto Parks and recreation Edit Espoo Central Park The city s 880 hectare 2 200 acre Central Park is located directly in the middle of the city and it consists of natural forests meadows cliffs wetlands as well as recreational routes Central Park is the second largest natural area in Espoo after Nuuksio National Park located in the northern part of the city 59 The park consists of two separate areas Central Park I and II approved by the City Council in 1996 and 2004 respectively 135 Government and politics Edit Espoo City Hall located in Espoon keskus Espoo s city council has 75 members Following the municipal election of 2017 the council seats are allocated in the following way National Coalition Party 26 seats Greens 17 Social Democrats 10 True Finns 7 Swedish People s Party 6 Centre Party 3 Left Alliance 3 Christian Democrats 2 and Liberal Party 1 136 Nationally Espoo is a part of the constituency of Uusimaa Support for the centre right politics especially the National Coalition Party is traditionally high in Espoo Results of the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election in Espoo National Coalition Party 31 0 Green League 18 0 Social Democratic Party 13 0 Finns Party 11 5 Swedish People s Party 7 7 Movement Now 4 1 Centre Party 4 0 Left Alliance 3 5 Christian Democrats 2 7 Blue Reform 1 7 Espoo is the home for the former Finns Party chairman Timo Soini Services EditEducation Edit The auditorium of the main building of the Helsinki University of Technology now part of the Aalto University designed by Alvar Aalto The Otaniemi campus of the Aalto University is located in Espoo containing all six colleges of the university starting from February 2019 137 138 Espoo is also home to the Metropolia University of Applied Sciences formerly known as the Technical University of Applied Sciences in Espoo Vantaa and local colleges of the Laurea University of Applied Sciences The musical institute Juvenalia is located near the Sello shopping centre The Espoo Musical Institute is located in the Espoo Cultural Centre Healthcare Edit The Jorvi Hospital in Espoo The Jorvi Hospital is located in Karvasmaki in Espoo cooperating with the Helsinki University Central Hospital and belonging to the Hospital District of Helsinki and Uusimaa There are a total of ten healthcare stations handling municipal healthcare in Espoo Infrastructure Edit A night time view of the environment around Lansivayla The Tapiola metro station has a connection to the Ainoa shopping centre There are two controlled access highways going through Espoo to the west Lansivayla which is part of the Finnish national road 51 between Helsinki and Karjaa and the Finnish national road 1 going further west to Turku These roads and other main roads leading from Helsinki to various directions are connected by the beltways Ring I and Ring III partly located in Espoo as well as Ring II leading from Lansivayla to the Finnish regional road 110 located entirely in Espoo The Finnish regional road 120 goes through northern Espoo forming part of the old route of the Finnish national road 2 Public transport Edit Espoo is well served by public transport through the Helsinki commuter rail network the Helsinki Metro s Lansimetro extension opened in November 2017 and buses provided by Helsingin seudun liikenne In 2024 the orbital Jokeri light rail line will connect Espoo to eastern Helsinki Data communications in Espoo have been handled by sixteen broadcast frequencies 139 Metro transport Edit Route map of the Lansimetro extension The Lansimetro extension to the Helsinki Metro was started in 2008 and the first phase was opened for traffic on 18 November 2017 140 The first phase consists of six stations Keilaniemi Aalto University Tapiola Urheilupuisto Niittykumpu and Matinkyla The second phase consists of an additional five stations Finnoo Kaitaa Soukka Espoonlahti and Kivenlahti and was originally expected to be completed in 2023 at the earliest 141 142 The extension was completed on 3 December 2022 143 Railway transport Edit A JKOY Class Sm5 local train at the Leppavaara railway station There are nine railway stations in Espoo 144 of which only the Leppavaara railway station serves long distance traffic 145 The Leppavaara railway station is the busiest railway station in Espoo with the Espoo railway station being the second busiest 146 The local traffic on the Rantarata railway is frequent and the train lines are marked with letters L trains stop at every station from Helsinki Central Station to Kirkkonummi railway station E U L and X trains stop at every station in Espoo and Kauniainen except Makkyla railway station Only A and L trains stop at Makkyla Y trains between Helsinki Central Station and Siuntio railway station stop at Leppavaara railway station Espoo railway station and Kauklahti railway station A trains travel along the Leppavaara city railway with a terminus at Leppavaara All local trains travelling through Espoo stop at Pasila railway station with connections to Tampere and Saint Petersburg in Russia and also at Huopalahti railway station with a P train connection to the Helsinki Airport in northern Vantaa 147 Long distance trains between Helsinki and Turku previously stopped at Espoo railway station Starting from autumn 2015 the stop was moved to Leppavaara railway station 148 Bus transport Edit A bus on line 550 in Otaniemi Numerous bus lines serve public transport in Espoo The Helsinki Regional Transport Authority is responsible for bus transport in Espoo planning the routes timetables and ticket systems 149 Bus line 200 is the only trunk line in Espoo travelling between Espoon keskus and the Eliel Square in central Helsinki 150 The line has 32 stops which is 12 stops fewer in Espoo than on the previous trunk line 235 151 There are a hundred accessible bus stops in Espoo The first accessible stop was built in 2006 on Puolarintie next to the Puolarmetsa Hospital 152 Bus lines in southern Espoo travel to the Matinkyla metro station and at times of heavy traffic directly to the Kamppi Center in Helsinki There are also internal bus lines to Tapiola In contrast the bus lines in central and northern Espoo travel via Toolo to the Eliel Square All line numbers of Espoo bus lines were changed to three digits in the 2010s Line numbers beginning with 1 mainly travel in southern Espoo and line numbers beginning with 2 in central and northern Espoo Bus lines travelling between southern and central Espoo have numbers beginning with 5 The Joker line 550 travels between Westend and Itakeskus bypassing the Helsinki city centre by going to the north of it International relations EditThe City of Espoo has eight official sister cities 153 Esztergom Hungary Irving Texas United States 154 Koge Denmark Kongsberg Norway Kristianstad Sweden Nomme Estonia Shanghai China Skagafjordur IcelandNotable people EditSusan Aho born 1974 singer and member of the band Varttina Peter Ahola born 1968 former NHL player for the San Jose Sharks Los Angeles Kings and others Niklas Hagman born 1979 ice hockey player Kirsi Heikkinen born 1978 football referee Miro Heiskanen born 1999 ice hockey player Ella Junnila born 1998 athlete Henri Kontinen born 1990 tennis player Krista Kosonen born 1983 actress Mikko Karna born 1980 politician Alexi Laiho 1979 2020 guitarist and vocalist co founder of the metal band Children of Bodom Jani Lajunen born 1990 ice hockey player Konsta Lappalainen born 2001 racing driver Jere Lehtinen born 1973 ice hockey player JJ Lehto born 1966 racing driver Laura Lepisto born 1988 figure skater Sami Lepisto born 1984 ice hockey player Petri Lindroos born 1980 musician and member of the Finnish folk metal band Ensiferum Pekka Lundmark born 1966 businessman Heidi Parviainen born 1979 musician and member of the Finnish symphonic metal band Dark Sarah former lead of Finnish symphonic power metal band Amberian Dawn Kimi Raikkonen born 1979 former racing driver and 2007 Formula One World Champion Tony Salmelainen born 1981 ice hockey player Joonas Suotamo born 1986 actor in the Star Wars series and a former professional basketball player Gosta Sundqvist 1957 2003 bandleader of Leevi and the Leavings Antti Tormanen born 1970 ice hockey coach Valtteri Virkkunen born 1991 ice hockey player Ville Virtanen born 1961 actor Mirel Wagner born 1987 singerSee also EditThe UN s Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context signed in Espoo 1991 text of Convention Districts of Espoo Espoo Metro Areena FC Espoo Iso Omena Kauniainen Kyto Lake Bodom Lansivayla Pakankyla Postipuu School Ring II Sello mall shooting Tapiola Espoo Westend Espoo List of European regions by GDPNotes Edit In the middle of Espoo an area that does not belong to the city is the town of Kauniainen According to tradition a priest named Henricus was inaugurated as the first vicar of Espoo in 1458 1 2 Although the historicity of Henricus is somewhat uncertain the date is celebrated as the founding of the city 1 Finland Swedish ˈesːbo listen Standard Swedish ˈɛ sːbɔ According to a census taken in 1694 there were 817 people subject to a poll tax in the parish of Espoo A widely used method to estimate the whole population is to add 10 to the given amount and multiply it by two which amounts to approximately 1 800 86 The population is estimated to have fallen drastically due to the Great Famine of 1695 1697 and the Russian occupation in 1713 1721 86 References EditCitations Edit a b c Espoon tuomiokirkon historia Kirkko Espoossa Archived from the original on 9 April 2021 Retrieved 8 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m History of Espoo City of Espoo Archived from the original on 20 January 2021 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Area of Finnish Municipalities 1 1 2018 PDF National Land Survey of Finland Retrieved 30 January 2018 a b c d Preliminary population structure by area 2021M01 2021M12 StatFin in Finnish Statistics Finland Retrieved 2 February 2022 Population according to language and the number of foreigners and land area km2 by area as of 31 December 2008 Statistics Finland s PX Web databases Statistics Finland Retrieved 29 March 2009 Population according to age 1 year and sex by area and the regional division of each statistical reference year 2003 2020 StatFin Statistics Finland Retrieved 2 May 2021 List of municipal and parish tax rates in 2021 PDF Tax Administration of Finland 1 December 2020 Retrieved 10 April 2021 Espoo Lexico UK Dictionary Oxford University Press Retrieved 10 March 2021 a b c d e f g Information about Espoo City of Espoo Retrieved 26 February 2021 Vaesto Espoon kaupunki www espoo fi in Finnish Retrieved 1 July 2022 Changes of Population Helsinki Region Trends City of Helsinki Archived from the original on 19 April 2021 Retrieved 12 March 2021 a b Hakanpaa Paivi 2005 Espoon etelaosien historiallisen ajan kylanpaikkojen yleiskaavainventointi Finnish Heritage Agency p 6 Retrieved 11 March 2021 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help a b c d Kepsu Saulo 2005 Uuteen maahan Helsingin ja Vantaan vanha asutus ja nimisto Suomalaisen kirjallisuuden seura pp 40 42 ISBN 9789517467230 Education in Espoo Finnish Education Unit City of Espoo February 2018 p 5 Retrieved 10 March 2021 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Espoon aluejaot City of Espoo Retrieved 26 February 2021 Neighbourhoods of Espoo My Helsinki City of Helsinki Retrieved 4 March 2021 Espoon keskus Esbo centrum City of Espoo Retrieved 5 March 2021 Suuri Rantatie Kuninkaantie 1999 Accessed on 20 February 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Espoon historia city of Espoo Accessed on 6 December 2017 Museovirasto Rekisteriportaali Accessed on 13 October 2016 a b Georg Haggren Petri Halinen Mika Lavento Sami Raninen ja Anna Wessman 2015 Muinaisuutemme jaljet Gaudeamus ISBN 9789524953634 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ainiala Terhi Saarelma Minna Sjoblom Paula Nimistontutkimuksen perusteet p 127 Finnish Literature Society 2008 Mallat Kaija ed Kyla Espoo Espoon vanha asutusnimisto ja kylamaisema Centre for urban planning in Espoo 2008 pp 35 38 ISBN 978 951 857 381 7 a b Grasan tarina city of Espoo Accessed on 28 November 2020 Manors in Finland Discovering Finland Retrieved 7 April 2021 Tarkka Tierala Hannele Albergan historia ulottuu 1600 luvulle Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish Retrieved 3 April 2021 Suomen sota 1808 1809 in Finnish Yle Elava Arkisto Retrieved 7 April 2021 a b Bastvikin hoyrysaha kyppi fi Finnish Heritage Agency 19 February 2019 Retrieved 7 April 2021 a b Soukanranta in Finnish City of Espoo Retrieved 7 April 2021 Historical Events on August 1 On This Day Accessed on 27 November 2020 a b Helsinkia kiertaa 1 maailmansodan linnoitusketju katso kartta YLE Accessed on 20 December 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Kouvola Karolina Sipponen Leena Henttonen Maarit Valoranta Saltikoff Sanna Heikkila Toni Laamanen Jaana Nikkanen Konsta Sisallissodan aikaan Espoossa City museum of Espoo 2018 ISBN 978 951 857 782 2 Autonomiasta itsenaisyyteen Traditional council Aurora Accessed on 17 December 2017 550 vuotias Espoo on kasvanut aikuiseksi Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish a b c d e f g Valiaho Tuomo Viela 1960 luvulla Espoota pidettiin villina lantena jossa olivat omat lait ja kaytostavat Silloin kyti juonittelu jollaista ei oltu ennen nahty Helsingin Sanomat 28 August 2022 Accessed on 29 August 2022 Lehtokari Rosa 29 June 2022 Espoolaisia on nyt 300 000 kaupunginjohtaja Jukka Makela kavi onnittelemassa tuoreinta espoolaista Yle in Finnish Retrieved 31 August 2022 74 miljoonan euron kauppa Fortumin paakonttori Raaden hammas Espoossa vaihtoi omistajaa YLE Accessed on 20 December 2017 a b Espoon kulttuurikeskus 1989 Arkkitehtitoimisto Sipinen Oy Accessed on 28 November 2020 a b Espoon kulttuurikeskuksen historia ja arkkitehtuuri city of Espoo Accessed on 28 November 2020 Joko lansimetron kyytiin vihdoin paasee Yle seuraa tiedotustilaisuutta suorana kello 9 YLE Accessed on 10 November 2017 a b c d e Paikkala Sirkka ed Jarvi Espoo vesistonimet luontoa historiaa ja tulevaisuutta Nomenclature unit of the urban planning bureau of Espoo 1992 ISBN missing Espoo tarina in Finnish Espoo City of Espoo 11 September 2017 p 2 Retrieved 2 April 2021 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help a b c d ESPOON ARVOKKAAT GEOLOGISET KOHTEET 2006 environmental centre of Espoo Accessed on 9 November 2017 a b Espoon kallioperan synty environmental centre of Espoo Accessed on 5 November 2017 a b UUDENMAAN MERI JA RANNIKKOALUESELVITYS Helsinki Uusimaa Regional Council Accessed on 5 November 2017 Venesatamat city of Espoo Accessed on 15 March 2019 Espoo environmental centre of Finland Accessed on 12 October 2019 Espoon rannat ja saaristo Espoo550 Accessed on 6 November 2017 Rantaraitti city of Espoo Accessed on 6 November 2017 Uudenmaan Natura 2000 alueet environmental council of Finland Accessed on 16 August 2014 ESPOON LUONNON MONIMUOTOISUUDEN SUOJELUN TOIMENPIDEOHJELMA p 10 12 Accessed on 7 November 2017 Espoon Keskuspuisto Nature preservation association of Finland Accessed on 7 November 2017 Hiironniemi Kalevi Pajakoski Johanna Kuin pieni Suomi Espoon luontoa merelta eramaahan p 10 City of Espoo 2008 ISBN 978 951 857 514 9 Kotinurkilta kallioille Espoon luontokohteet 12 13 Espoon korkein kohta city of Espoo Accessed on 7 November 2017 Kotinurkilta kallioille Espoon luontokohteet 4 16 Soukan kasavuori city of Espoo Accessed on 7 November 2017 Espoo jarviwiki fi Accessed on 9 September 2019 a b c d Selvitys Espoon jarvien tilasta environmental centre of Uusimaa Accessed on 9 November 2017 Ahola Joel Nuuksio retkeilyopas amp kartta Helsinki Retkeilymedia Ahola ja Affecto Oy 2008 ISBN 978 951 593 200 6 a b Central Park green urban oasis City of Espoo Retrieved 10 March 2021 Mansikka Heli Suomi sai Amerikan lahjaksi 7 valkohantapeuraa ne vapautettiin luontoon ja nyt niita on 100 000 laukonpeurojen historia on kiehtova tarina isanmaanrakkaudesta Yle in Finnish Retrieved 3 April 2021 a b Retkivinkki Finnoon allas Espoon Suomenojalla in Finnish Suomen Luonto Retrieved 13 February 2021 Endangered species City of Espoo Retrieved 11 March 2021 Tarkka Tierala Hannele Liito orava mustarastas ja valkovuokko nimikkosuosikit Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish Retrieved 3 April 2021 Flying squirrel the symbol of Espoo City of Espoo Retrieved 11 March 2021 a b Uusimaa ja Ita Uusimaa avomerelta Lohjanharjulle Finnish Meteorological Institute Accessed on 21 April 2020 Suurpellon luonto muutoksen kynnyksella city of Espoo Accessed on 22 April 2020 TILASTOJA SUOMEN ILMASTOSTA1981 2010 Finnish Meteorological Institute Accessed on 21 April 2020 Ilmatieteen laitoksen havaintoasemat Finnish Meteorological Institute Accessed on 21 April 2020 Tuulisuus Suomessa Accessed on 5 May 2020 Saan takaa Foreca Accessed on 5 May 2020 Espoossa hengitetaan hyvaa ilmaa city of Espoo Accessed on 22 April 2020 Kitkarenkaiden kaytolla parempaa ilmanlaatua publications of the construction bureau of the city of Helsinki 2013 Accessed on 22 April 2020 Siitepolykausi Suomessa Allergy and Asthma Association of Finland Accessed on 23 April 2020 a b Espoo Finland Sunrise Sunset and Daylength Time and Date AS Accessed on 22 April 2020 Calculate Shadow Casting Length Height Altitude of the Sun Jumk de Webprojects Accessed on 4 May 2020 Terminen kasvukausi Finnish Meteorological Institute Accessed on 22 April 2020 Kaupunginosat city of Espoo Accessed on 31 March 2020 Ladattavat tiedostot Tietoisku 2 2022 city of Espoo Accessed on 28 April 2022 Espoo alueittain 2011 city of Espoo Accessed on 28 April 2022 Metropolialueen esiselvityksen ehdotukset kuntakasittelyyn valmistuivat ymparisto fi www ymparisto fi Archived from the original on 22 January 2013 Retrieved 21 September 2022 Espoon poliittinen johto vastustaa pakkoliitoksia city of Espoo 13 February 2012 dead link a b c d Kaupunginjohtaja ja toimialajohto city of Espoo Accessed on 30 April 2022 Kemppi Virtanen Pirjo Framilla Espoo tarina kolme kaupunginjohtajaa 15 10 2013 National Coalition Party of Espoo 28 October 2013 Accessed on 18 April 2016 Kuntavaalit 2017 tulospalvelu YLE 9 April 2017 Eduskuntavaalit 2019 tulospalvelu YLE 14 April 2019 a b c Nikander Hagar 1984 Espoo 1700 1865 pp 23 24 ISBN 951 95224 4 1 Tilastokeskus Population statistics Tilastokeskus Retrieved on 9 June 2014 Mikko Valimaa 22 9 2021 6 00 22 September 2021 Tilasto kertoo Espoon kaupunginosien eriytymisesta vieraskieliset asuvat omissa lahioissaan ja tienaavat selvasti kansalliskielisia vahemman naissa lahioissa vieraskielisia on yli 30 ja alle 10 prosenttia Paikalliset Lansivayla Lansivayla fi Retrieved 1 September 2022 a b Vaestorakenne ja vaestonmuutokset espoo fi in Finnish Retrieved 24 September 2020 a b c d e Vaesto 31 12 muuttujina Alue Sukupuoli Vuosi Kieli ja Tiedot permanent dead link Statistics Finland 2021 ISSN 1797 5379 Accessed on 31 March 2022 Talousarvio 2018 seka taloussuunitelma city of Espoo Accessed on 11 April 2018 Suomen tilastollinen vuosikirja doria fi 31 December 1950 Accessed on 14 May 2018 Suomen tilastollinen vuosikirja doria fi 31 December 1960 Accessed on 14 May 2018 a b Aluesarjat fi Taulukko Espoon vaesto aidinkielen mukaan 1 1 Archived from the original on 21 April 2020 Retrieved 10 September 2022 Vaestorakenne ja vaestonmuutokset city of Espoo Accessed on 24 September 2020 Kirkkoon kuuluvuus 2019 Kirkontilastot fi 31 December 2019 Accessed on 16 May 2020 Yhteystiedot Suomen evankelis luterilainen kirkko Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland Accessed on 23 August 2018 Espoon hautausmaaselvitys p 10 City of Espoo 2004 ISBN 951 857 468 5 Accessed on 25 February 2013 Kirkot Espoonseurakunnat fi Accessed on 31 July 2013 Helsingin ortodoksinen seurakunta Tapiolan kirkko Helsingin ortodoksinen seurakunta Helsinki Orthodox Congregation Accessed on 9 October 2018 Seurakunnat Pentecostal Church of Finland Accessed on 6 September 2021 Seurakunnat Evangelical Free Church of Finland Accessed on 19 July 2022 a b c d e f g h Ikkala Marja Leena Kylasta lahioon Espoo sarja City of Espoo 1989 ISBN 951 857 124 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Haro Erkki Espoon rakennuskulttuuri ja kulttuurimaisemat Byggnadskulturen och kulturlandskapet i Esbo Second revised edition Helsinki City museum of Espoo 1991 ISBN 951 857 182 1 a b c Espoon kaupungin taskutilasto 2017 city of Espoo Accessed on 13 November 2017 Tietoa Espoosta city of Espoo Accessed on 14 November 2017 Yhteystiedot Nokia Nokia Corporation in Finnish Retrieved 5 February 2023 Ota yhteytta Fortumiin Yhteystiedot Toimipisteet Huhtamaki Group Archived from the original on 21 October 2017 Ota yhteytta Metsa Group Orion yrityksena Yhteystiedot Archived from the original on 7 May 2021 Retrieved 13 September 2022 Contact Ryhman rakenne ja johto LahiTapiola Raportit Kausitilitykset Kunnat Valittu kunta Espoon kaupunki Finnish tax bureau Accessed on 13 January 2022 a b c d Talous 2016 city of Espoo Accessed on 16 November 2017 Espoo fi gt Tyo ja yrittaminen Archived from the original on 12 December 2017 Espoon kaupungin taskutilasto 2017 pp 15 16 city of Espoo Accessed on 13 November 2017 a b Helsingin seudun aluesarjat Helsinki Espoo Vantaa Helsinki Region Environmental Services and Helsinki Uusimaa Regional Council Accessed on 14 November 2017 Vuodet 1893 Awakening movement Accessed on 27 March 2022 Kolmonen Jaakko 1988 Kotomaamme ruoka aitta Suomen Karjalan ja Petsamon pitajaruoat p 50 Helsinki Patakolmonen Ky Oksanen Kimmo Downin oireyhtyma ei hidasta 14 vuotiasta Saga Hannista Han on Espoon Vuoden urheilija Helsingin Sanomat 24 December 2014 Accessed on 25 December 2015 Liikunta ja nuorisolautakunta valitsi vuoden 2015 espoolaiseksi urheilijaksi jousiampuja Jarkko Lehtisen city of Espoo Accessed on 7 June 2018 Vuoden 2016 espoolainen urheilija joukkue ja urheiluteko on valittu city of Espoo Accessed on 7 June 2018 Repo Sirja Nuoresta ampujasta vuoden urheilija FC Hongan naisista vuoden joukkue Lansivayla Accessed on 7 June 2018 Hiitela Juha 12 April 2016 Konkurssipesa myontaa Bluesin tilanteeseen ei ratkaisua The bankrupt organization concedes Blues situation has no solution Ilta Sanomat in Finnish Retrieved 15 July 2019 Lempinen Marko 28 April 2016 Nyt se on varmaa Jussi Salonoja perusti uuden seuran Lahetan hakupaperit tanaan Now it is certain Jussi Salonoja founded a new club I m submitting league admittance papers today Ilta Sanomat in Finnish Retrieved 15 July 2019 Oivio Janne Lempinen Marko 15 August 2017 Jussi Salonojalta raju ratkaisu Espoo United hylkaa naisjoukkueet Jussi Salonoja s drastic solution Espoo United to abandon women s teams Ilta Sanomat in Finnish Retrieved 15 July 2019 Foster Meredith 17 August 2017 Espoo United women s team folds one month before puck drop The Ice Garden Retrieved 15 July 2019 Foster Meredith 4 September 2017 Blue Monday Blues Espoo join Naisten Liiga The Ice Garden Retrieved 15 July 2019 Espoo Unitedin konkurssista tuli virallista Espoo United s bankruptcy becomes official Ilta Sanomat in Finnish 4 May 2018 Retrieved 15 July 2019 Foster Meredith 30 April 2019 Kiekko Espoo absorb Espoo Blues rejoin top tier The Ice Garden Retrieved 15 July 2019 Etusivu Lansivaylajuoksu in Finnish Retrieved 28 November 2020 History of Central Park City of Espoo Retrieved 10 March 2021 Espoo Tulos puolueittain ja yhteislistoittain Ministry of Justice 13 April 2017 Retrieved 16 April 2017 Organisaatio Aalto University 10 April 2018 Accessed on 12 December 2018 Ekonominaukio 1 Kauppakorkeakoulun uusi osoite kunnioittaa historiallista muuttoa Aalto University 30 October 2018 Accessed on 12 December 2018 Radioasemat Suomessa Communications Bureau of Finland Accessed on 25 April 2020 Espoo www kaupunkiliikenne net Accessed on 14 November 2020 Asemat Lansimetro Accessed on 22 September 2022 Espoon metroasemat city of Espoo Accessed on 22 September 2022 Tara 30 November 2022 The metro extension enables better services and increases Espoo s vitality Helsinki Times Retrieved 4 December 2022 Espoon juna asemat Hagerlund net Accessed on 14 November 2020 Kulkuyhteydet Visitespoo fi Accessed on 14 November 2020 Leppavaara on Espoon vilkkain juna asema Makkyla erittain hiljainen Newsbox fi 24 January 2019 Accessed on 14 November 2020 Lahiliikenteen reittikartta VR Group Accessed on 17 March 2019 Muutoksia kaukoliikenteeseen VR Group Accessed on 17 March 2019 Joukkoliikenne city of Espoo Accessed on 17 November 2020 Aalto Sirkku Uusi runkobussi Espoon keskuksesta Elielinaukiolle korvaa linjan 235 ja parikymmenta pysakkia jaa pois Espoossa lakkautetaan kokonaan kolme bussilinjaa Lansivayla 23 July 2020 Accessed on 17 November 2020 Uusi runkolinja 200 aloittaa Elielinaukion ja Espoon keskuksen valilla elokuussa Helsinki Regional Transport Authority Accessed on 17 November 2020 Espoossa on jo sata esteetonta bussipysakkia ja lisaa tulossa city of Espoo Accessed on 17 November 2020 Networks City of Espoo Retrieved 10 March 2021 Interactive City Directory Sister Cities International Archived from the original on 12 March 2014 Retrieved 12 March 2014 Sources Espoon kaupungin taskutilasto 2007 issued by the City of Espoo 2007External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Espoo Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Espoo 1952 Summer Olympics official report p 50 City of Espoo Official website in Finnish City of Espoo Esbo Official website in Swedish City of Espoo Archived 20 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine Official website in English Visit Espoo Espoo for travellers in Finnish Swedish and English Aalto University Official website in Finnish Swedish and English Helsinki fi Helsinki region in a nutshell in Finnish Swedish and English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Espoo amp oldid 1137700548, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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