Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Finland East: Saturday

We rode for a little while and then stopped at Säynätsalo town hall by Aalto.  It's apparently a big deal, but it was locked up...thankfully it's programmed as part of our Finland West loop in three weeks.




My favorite part was just how the snow hung off the roof line.



It was chilly and I didn't love the building, so got back to the bus early and cheesily took my own picture.


This is part of a library and theater space in a nearby town.  I do not remember the name of the city, but it was a lovely building particularly because I think only about 14,000 citizens reside here.



I couldn't believe how scary and big Harry Potter's (and his friends) nose is in Finland.


This is a famous cartoon character in Finland...I should know its name...something like Mumot.


They love having children's spaces in a lot of Finnish public buildings.


The kid space even had their own tower with sky light!


Our final town for Saturday was Kupio which had the building I was most excited to see on our trip.  I think I took at least 100 photos of this building, the Mannisto Church by Juha Leiviska.  Part of my fascination was simply liking the spaces and being excited to see something in person that I have admired in multiple architecture books and magazines.  I am also writing my history paper this semester on Leiviska, so snapping a lot of my own pictures and elements of the building I noticed or enjoyed had scholastic motivation too.








Juha worked with an artist who did some painting in the church.  While most of the surfaces are white, some walls and panels have pastel colors on them.  In addition to being beautiful and simple in the space, some of this color is placed intentionally to affect the light that Leiviska sees as an architectural material.  These images are of the colored panels and reflected light on the nearby white walls.



This parish apparently serves 16,000 registered Lutherans.  Hearing this emphasized how different it is to be a member of a church by sending money to it through taxes.  The actual structure only seats 600 people when the walls are open, but usually the main sanctuary is intended for less people than that.




I saw these 3d flannograph-type characters!  I think it includes the boy with the loaves and fishes, Joseph, Moses's Egyptian "mom", Moses, Mary, and Joseph.


This is the bomb shelter (which is used as a youth room).  Each Finnish building of a particular size (even apartment buildings) must, by law, have a bomb shelter which is supposed to keep people safe for 15 days.  These facilities are so expensive to build that often they are used for different purposes.  Storage is common, but this is not odd either.  The only thing about the pool table is that everything extra should be able to be removed from the space very quickly...I'm not so sure this counts.


The light is such a crucial element to this room and it was amazing how much it shifted.  It was nice when we first entered, but then we wandered through other rooms for about 15 minutes and came back to this breath taking show of light.






See - I was there!


Our final stop was a relatively recent building by Juhanni Palassmaa (whose office we often get to visit...he's very well known for his architectural writing).  We now all have the perception that Juhanni secretly loves color which is not something we would have expected.


Not a great picture, but the reflection was so great with the light levels that I felt the need to play a little.


This is the girls room.  I felt like I was girl number 2 in Madeline again with our little beds all in a row.  We each sat down and started reading (knitting, in my case) and then found ourselves taking an easy hour nap before meeting up with everyone for dinner at 6:30pm.  I had a garlic steak - quite good...but they don't have the same kind of beef here (at least not that I've found so far).  Once again the night ended in a bit of dancing - the place we went to seemed to be mostly frequented by high school and very young college students but we had a lot of fun!

Finland East: Friday

After three weeks of school in Helsinki, it was time for another school organized excursion!  This time instead of 8 students and one studio prof heading north we had 9 students, a history teacher, her husband, and a driver traveling east in a cross between a van and a bus.  The adventure began on Friday morning: I am so thankful for the increase in light over the last few weeks and that I have been getting plenty rest because my alarm failed to go off yet I still woke at 6:50am.  Sally and I got ready and headed out the door with coffee on the brain.  We stopped by a lovely bakery but they had just opened (7:30am) and didn't appear to having "to go" cups as an option.  Sally had done her research, though, so we knew that Wayne's Coffee in the Kampii center would be open and that we would get half off our coffee purchase because of the time being before 10am.  Power walking with my luggage for the weekend was quite the workout so I ordered a fantastic chilly chai latte!  We made it to the bus just a couple minutes before 8am - not the last ones to arrive.


Essentially our home for three days on the road

After about an hour and a half driving, Sirkkaliisa (our history teacher) said it was time to wake up because we had arrived at our first stop: Sibelius Hall in Lahti, Finland.  The hall used to be some kind of factory (that's the brick), but the renovation and addition were completed in 2000.




This hall is one of the top five concert halls with regard to acoustics in the world.


These red panels are the secret.  They can open (and vary in position based on the type of performance on stage) to a hallway outside of the main space.  This outer layer has a curtain hanging to dampen the reverberation, the wood on the walls is specially treated, and the next layer is sand followed by glass.  Very very cool.



Sibelius


A model of the brilliant wall system 




This turned into a weird self portrait but was meant to be a photo of the plans for the building.


We thought these beam and wires were probably overkill for the wind loads that may exist in this region...but they sure looked neat.


This is the Piano Pavilion.  I asked a classmate why there were only chairs inside and no piano and then learned that the building is named for Renzo Piano who was the first recipient of the International Spirit of Nature Wood Architecture Award.



The snow was actually good packing snow (this is a new development as spring is coming to Finland) so Kenny thought it would be fun to pack a snowball and aim at a target.


He hit a light post 3 out of 4 times while anyone else could not get within five feet.  We've decided as a group that there is nothing Kenny cannot do and do well.


Next in Lahti we drove into the city centre at stopped at the first Aalto building of this trip - the Church of the Cross.  I was not really interested or impressed based on the outside.


But the light and design of the interior was much more appealing to me.



Aalto lights...we've seen this design in other parts of Finland


LOVE the organs in these churches




Although not visually wonderful, I thought the material on the floor of the stairs and upper level was brilliant b/c even in my shoes which clip and clop irritatingly, I could walk silently.  This is perfect for a church, especially in the area where the choir sits and parents with young children are more likely to choose.




Aalto stools in case multitudes come to a service.


I really liked the combination of natural light streaming into the space as yellow artificial light mixed with it.


Our bus/van had something wrong with the tire, so as our driver went to a mechanic to keep everything up and running, we wandered into town for lunch.  Instead of the market or sushi, we chose to eat at a very busy Italian restaurant.  My salad was fantastic and pasta was okay (they really like substantial noodles that are not cooked past al dente in Finland).  As we were leaving, we saw a poster that stated the restaurant was ranked the second best Italian restaurant in Finland on a facebook survey.  We then headed across town to the other landmark of the main axis: town hall.




This building was designed by Eliel Saarinin and had more character than any town hall I have seen before.





Dan wanted to be part of the painting.  This mural reminded me of art done for the Land Grant Universities in the US (I've seen them in the libraries of Purdue and ISU), but I could not remember that artists name.  I asked my classmates...but they hadn't even heard of Land Grant Schools!

Our next, and final town for the night, was Jyävskylä.  rd We started at one of Aalto's first buildings.  It was for some club/organization.  It was probably my least favorite Aalto so far, although I enjoyed some of the light fixtures the overall design felt a lot like a very small scale casino to me.



Next we went to the University where Aalto designed most of the buildings.


An Aalto library!  This is my least favorite that I have seen so far.  It's good that we are going to all of these libraries b/c a library is a central part of our design project for the semester.


Sally found a body building magazine!

Next we went to the Aalto museum which was just about a block from the university.  Aalto was commissioned to design this building knowing full well it would be a museum about him and his work.  I think that's both perfect and a little sickening.  It was very strange, but very neat that about half of the buildings documented in the exhibits are ones we have visited as a class.


Naturally, Aalto's chairs were featured in the exhibit.


How they get those lovely bends in the chair, table, and stool legs.




I'm not a huge fan of the colors, but really like this "woven chair" idea.

After the museum, we went to the hostel.  It was full for the night so we only had 2 rooms (8 beds) for the nine of us.  They had a very clever system of managing costs for the hostel: no keys or front desk, when an individual placed a reservation he or she received a text message with a security code and a room number.  This security code provided admittance into the building, onto the appropriate floor, and into the actual room.  One of the rooms was quite large, so five people stayed there with the lack-of-bed individual getting the mattress topper from two other beds.

We then went downtown for a bit (two blocks away) and hung out until 6:30pm when we walked over to Memphis (a chain but with Aalto designed light fixtures) to meet Sirkaliisa and her husband.  They hung out with us after dinner at the bar where they thought all the college student came but I don't think country music is much of an indication of the happening place.  When they retired, some of us went to another place with more upbeat music, a dance floor, and a fog machine.  I had a few Finns try to talk to me; it took awhile to get them to understand that I could not speak the language.  Once the point got across, I was informed "You don't look American, you look like a Finn" by one boy....I did not know what the appropriate response was..."thank you?"