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helsinki+court+house Latitude and Longitude:

60°09′49″N 024°54′03″E / 60.16361°N 24.90083°E / 60.16361; 24.90083
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Helsinki Court House
Helsingin oikeustalo
General information
Architectural style Industrial
Town or city Helsinki
Country Finland
Coordinates 60°09′49″N 024°54′03″E / 60.16361°N 24.90083°E / 60.16361; 24.90083
Construction started1937
Completed1940
Client Alko
Owner City of Helsinki
Design and construction
Architect(s) Väinö Vähäkallio

Helsinki Court House ( Finnish: Helsingin oikeustalo) is situated on Salmisaari in Helsinki, Finland. Designed by Väinö Vähäkallio [ fi], it was constructed between 1937 and 1940 as Alko's headquarters, factory and main storage, and was partially reconstructed in 2004, when it became a court house.

Stylistically the building is a modernist updating of 19th-century warehouses, massive and with slight curves and no detailing except heavily framed strip windows and rounded entrance bays. [1]

References

  1. ^ Malcolm Quantrill (1995). Finnish Architecture and the Modernist Tradition. London: Spon. p. 234. ISBN  9780419195207.

External links



helsinki+court+house Latitude and Longitude:

60°09′49″N 024°54′03″E / 60.16361°N 24.90083°E / 60.16361; 24.90083
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Helsinki Court House
Helsingin oikeustalo
General information
Architectural style Industrial
Town or city Helsinki
Country Finland
Coordinates 60°09′49″N 024°54′03″E / 60.16361°N 24.90083°E / 60.16361; 24.90083
Construction started1937
Completed1940
Client Alko
Owner City of Helsinki
Design and construction
Architect(s) Väinö Vähäkallio

Helsinki Court House ( Finnish: Helsingin oikeustalo) is situated on Salmisaari in Helsinki, Finland. Designed by Väinö Vähäkallio [ fi], it was constructed between 1937 and 1940 as Alko's headquarters, factory and main storage, and was partially reconstructed in 2004, when it became a court house.

Stylistically the building is a modernist updating of 19th-century warehouses, massive and with slight curves and no detailing except heavily framed strip windows and rounded entrance bays. [1]

References

  1. ^ Malcolm Quantrill (1995). Finnish Architecture and the Modernist Tradition. London: Spon. p. 234. ISBN  9780419195207.

External links



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