Finnish: Laajalahti | |
Native Name: | Bredvik |
Native Name Lang: | sv |
Settlement Type: | District of Espoo |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location of Laajalahti within Finland |
Coordinates: | 60.2°N 24.8042°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Finland |
Subdivision Type1: | Municipality |
Subdivision Name1: | Espoo |
Subdivision Type2: | Region |
Subdivision Name2: | Uusimaa |
Subdivision Type3: | Sub-region |
Subdivision Name3: | Greater Helsinki |
Subdivision Type4: | Main District |
Subdivision Name4: | Suur-Tapiola |
Subdivision Type5: | Inner District(s) |
Subdivision Name5: | Ruukinranta, Pohjois-Laajalahti |
Population Total: | 3512 |
Population As Of: | 2006 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Demographics Type1: | Languages |
Demographics1 Title1: | Finnish |
Demographics1 Info1: | 90.2 % |
Demographics1 Title2: | Swedish |
Demographics1 Info2: | 6.0 % |
Demographics1 Title3: | Other |
Demographics1 Info3: | 3.8 % |
Blank Name Sec1: | Jobs |
Blank Info Sec1: | 1,865 |
Laajalahti (Swedish: Bredvik) is a district of Espoo, a city in Finland. It belongs to the area of Suur-Tapiola together with Westend, Tapiola, Pohjois-Tapiola, Otaniemi, Niittykumpu, Mankkaa, and Haukilahti. It gets its name from the bay on which it is located. Laajalahti belongs to three sectors; Laajaranta, Lupauksenvuori, and Ruukinranta.
Laajalahti is a marine area particularly known for its bird habitats. The Natura 2000 area in Laajalahti includes a 192-hectare shallow, spacious and grassy bay. As well as the bay and grass field, it is bordered by flood forests, meadow plants, former field areas and bushes.
Laajalahti has been classified as an internationally significant bird habitat. It is home to corn crakes and spotted crakes; also Eurasian bitterns, whooper swans, tundra swans and smews use it as a resting place during migration.
In western Laajalahti, near the golf field, is the culturally significant Muolaansuo swamp area, about two hectares in size. This naturally preserved poor fen is a part of the large Turvesuo swamp in Mankkaa. There are several types of swamps at small spots in Muolaansuo. The swamp is unique in the entire capital area as it is home to culturally significant plants such as the deergrass. The Turvesuo swamp has the only known Cladonia incrassata habitat in the entire country of Finland. This lichen is particularly protected by the nature preservation law. Its 1.9-hectare natural habitat was bordered by a decision from the Uusimaa environmental bureau in 2004. A small part of the habitat was protected as a natural monument already in 1993.
The earliest sign of human habitation in the Laajalahti area are stone graves. The graves were made in the Bronze Age three millennia ago. These so-called hiidenkiuas graves were close to the sea shore at the time. There is also a stone grave on top of the hill on the eastern edge of the Turvesuo swamp. There originally was a view to the sea from the top of the hill. Comb Ceramic culture findings from the shore of the ancient sea also tell of ancient human habitation.
Laajalahti is one of the youngest villages in Espoo. It was founded during the Swedish colonisation of Finland in the late 14th century at the earliest, on the lands of the Haapalahti Finnish villages. The first inhabitant of Laajalahti was probably some of the Swedish immigrants to Haapalahti. The village name Bredvik (in 1540 called Bredwijkby and in 1544 Bredwijck) is based on a Swedish house name, which in turn is based on the house's location on the shore of a bay. The Laajalahti bay is exceptionally wide and open compared to other bays in the area. In 1540 there were two houses in Laajalahti. The agricultural names in the area are very young and Swedish, but there has also been a Finnish-oriented name Läppnäs, in Finnish Leppäniemi (Alder Point).[1] The Bredvik village was deserted either during the 17th-century famine or during the Greater Wrath. On a 1801 map, the village was once again populated.
There are numerous fortifications from World War I in Laajalahti, which were part of Krepost Sveaborg. The largest remaining outpost XXXI: 1–2, 4-5 is located north of Turvesuontie in Laajalahti. The outpost has a total of 1.3 kilometres of trenches dug partially dug into the cliff, 18 protection buildings, 10 A class, 5 B class and 1 C class positions and some stairs leading down to the trenches.
There was peat industry at the Turvesuo (Swedish: Torvmossen) swamp in western Laajalahti from 1910 to 1962 and a cargo railway track to the Kilo railway station was built to serve it.[2] The Tarvontie road works of the Finnish national road 1 cut off the connection in 1960.[3] The Turveradantie road was completed in 2015 and follows the cargo rail track along the Laajalahti area. The Mankkaa landfill was located in western Turvesuo from 1957 to 1986.[4] The landfill area was later taken to reuse when the Tapiola Golf field and recreation area was opened there.
After the war, Laajalahti developed rapidly in the 1940s. The buildings in Laajalahti are spread quite evenly across different kinds of buildings, most of them are small detached houses.[5]
Along Hagalundintie, now known as Ring I, in Laajalahti there used to be a radio station with a tall radio mast.
Part of the original Laajalahti area now belongs to Pohjois-Tapiola, but is also known as Etelä-Laajalahti (southern Laajalahti).
A speciality of Laajalahti and Etelä-Laajalahti is that the streets in the area are named after former Finnish municipalities on the Karelian Isthmus. The streets have been named so that their order corresponds to the order of the original municipalities in Karelia. For example, there are Terijoentie and Metsäpirtintie in the south, and Jääskentie, Kirvuntie, Hiitolantie and Lumivaarantie in the north.
Most of the businesses and services in the area are located in the Laajalahti business area in northern Laajalahti. The Laajalahti library located near it served as the main library of Espoo for ten years from 1963 to 1973.[6]
There are cafés and restaurants in Ruukinranta, as well as a boat harbour.
The shopping centre Bredis is located in western Laajalahti. The links type golf field Tapiola golf is also located in western Laajalahti.[7]
The Laajalahti area includes the Akseli Gallen-Kallela museum, the Villa Elfvik nature protection area, the Laajalahti nature path, the Anja Pankasalo park, the Elfvik granite mine, the Ruukinranta boat harbour and the Kivennavanpuisto artillery outpost.
The flowers in the Laajalahti rhododendron and azalea can be enjoyed from early June to July depending on the current selection of flowers. After the rhododendrons have stopped blooming, the thousands of rare heath spotted-orchids start to bloom. The rhododendron park was built by the environmental group of Laajalahti ry led Espoo's fifth homeland patron Anja Pankasalo. The park was named the Anja Pankasalo park in a ceremony held in 2016.[8]
There is a large granite cliff at the forest surrounding the Villa Elfvik building commissioned by Freiherr Emil Standertskjöld. A mine was founded in the area in the early 20th century, which was used to mine dark red and blood-red Laajalahti granite. Dark red granite was used to build land and sea fortresses such as the Suomenlinna fortress, for the stone structures of the National Museum of Finland and for Villa Elfvik's own needs. The rare and valuable blood-red granite containing garnet is used for jewellery. A large amount of this so-called "Breda red gold" has been planted into a vault in an unknown location in the forest. There are also a few ponds in the mine area.
The architecturally exceptional Villa Åkerblom is located at the sea shore in eastern Laajalahti.[3]
Famous inhabitants of Laajalahti have included artist Akseli Gallen-Kallela[9] and sculptor Ville Vallgren. Akseli Gallen-Kallela's atelier is now the Gallen-Kallela Museum.
Current or former celebrities living in Laajalahti include author-illustrator Mauri Kunnas, musician Jore Marjoranta, pianist of the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra Jouko Laivuori, Member of Parliament Jyrki Kasvi and newsreader Leena Kaskela. Former Prime Minister of Finland Matti Vanhanen attended the Laajalahti school.
The overall organisation of Laajalahti is Laajalahti ry, founded in 1950. Its purpose is to develop the Laajalahti area to a higher degree of environment and services and to a pleasant living area, as well as gathering information and upholding a genuine Espoo spirit. Laajalahti ry works in connection with the inhabitant forum of Suur-Tapiola.
Ring I goes through Laajalahti in a north–south direction. As the coastal area is mostly unbuilt, most of the habitation in Laajalahti is to the west of the road.
Laajalahti is served by the following bus routes:
The route of the future Raide-Jokeri is planned to go through Laajalahti. There are plans for stations west of Hiitolantie and on Sakkolantie east of Ring I.[10]