Salo, Finland Explained

Salo
Official Name:Finnish: Salon kaupunki
Swedish: Salo stad
Settlement Type:City
Coordinates:60.3861°N 23.125°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Finland
Subdivision Type1:Region
Subdivision Name1:Southwest Finland
Subdivision Type2:Sub-region
Subdivision Name2:Salo
Leader Title:City manager
Leader Name:Tero Nissinen
Established Title:Market town
Established Date:1887
Established Title2:City rights
Established Date2:1960
Population Metro:64,650
Population Blank1 Title:52,442,667
Blank3 Name:Climate
Blank3 Info:Dfb
Timezone:EET
Utc Offset:+02:00
Timezone Dst:EEST
Utc Offset Dst:+03:00

Salo (in Finnish pronounced as /ˈsɑlo/) is a town in Finland, located in the southwestern interior of the country. The population of Salo is approximately, while the sub-region has a population of approximately . It is the most populous municipality in Finland, and the 24th most populous urban area in the country.

Salo is located in the Southwest Finland. Salo covers an area of NaNSalo, Finland}} of which NaNSalo, Finland}} is water. The population density is NaNSalo, Finland}} round 2}}. The municipality is unilingually Finnish.

The name Salo means woodland, backwoods, but also a wooded island in Finnish. It is believed that Salo originally referred to an island located south of the current town over a thousand years ago, which is now a hill due to post-glacial rebound, and not even close to the sea today.[1]

Salo is a small city located between the capital Helsinki (away) and the provincial capital Turku (away). The city's proximity to these larger cities has contributed to the growth of Salo's business sector. Additionally, farming plays a significant role in the area. Salo shares borders with Koski Tl, Lohja, Kimitoön, Marttila, Paimio, Raseborg, Sauvo and Somero. Salo is also twinned with Saint Anthony Village in Minnesota.

Salo was previously recognised for its significant consumer electronics and mobile phone industry. Nokia, and briefly Microsoft Mobile, operated a manufacturing plant in the town. However, the plant was closed in 2015, resulting in high unemployment rates.

Salo is the birthplace of the former president of Finland Sauli Niinistö.

History

Salo has existed as a centre of rural commerce since at least the 16th century, emerging in the location where the Great Coastal Road,[2] the important East-West road, crossed River Salo; the river provided the fairway to the sea. In 1887 Salo officially became a market town and, in the beginning of 1891, an independent municipality.[3] The area of the municipality was initially very small, only 0.65 km2. In 1932 it grew to 18 km2 when areas from neighbouring Uskela and Halikko were annexed to Salo. Eventually Salo became a town in 1960. The municipality of Uskela was consolidated with Salo 1967. The municipalities of Halikko, Kiikala, Kisko, Kuusjoki, Muurla, Perniö, Pertteli, Suomusjärvi and Särkisalo were consolidated with Salo in the beginning of 2009.Salo is also a popular last name in Finland.

Demographics

Population

The city of Salo has inhabitants, making it the most populous municipality in Finland. The Salo region has a population of . In Salo, 8.6% of the population has a foreign background, which is slightly below the national average.[4]

Languages

Salo is a monolingual Finnish-speaking municipality. The majority of the population - people or - speak Finnish as their first language. In Salo, people, or of the population, speak Swedish.[4] of the population of Salo have a mother tongue other than Finnish or Swedish.[4] As English and Swedish are compulsory school subjects, functional bilingualism or trilingualism acquired through language studies is not uncommon.

At least 30 different languages are spoken in Salo. The most common foreign languages are Russian (1.8%), Estonian (1.4%), Ukrainian (1.2%) and Kurdish (0.6%).[4]

Immigration

Population by country of birth (2022)
Nationality Population %
47,428 93.1
748 1.5
590 1.2
223 0.4
198 0.4
133 0.3
121 0.2
111 0.2
106 0.2
98 0.2
96 0.2
Other 1,081 2.1
, there were 4,401 persons with a migrant background living in Salo, or 8.6% of the population. The number of residents who were born abroad was 4,107, or 8.0% of the population. The number of persons with foreign citizenship living in Salo was 3,055.[4] Most foreign-born citizens came from the former Soviet Union, Estonia, Sweden and Iraq.[5]

The relative share of immigrants in Salo's population is slightly below the national average. However, the city's new residents are increasingly of foreign origin. This will increase the proportion of foreign residents in the coming years.

Religion

In 2023, the Evangelical Lutheran Church was the largest religious group with 70.4% of the population of Salo. Other religious groups accounted for 1.8% of the population. 27.8% of the population had no religious affiliation.[6]

Industry

Salo was well known in Finland and around the world for its large mobile phone factory operated by Nokia. Nokia first started producing mobile phones in Salo in 1981. A new plant, 15,000 square metres, opened in June 1995. By this time 1,200 people were employed there, and it exported products to 70 countries as of 1995.[7] As of 2008, 5,000 people were employed at the plant.[8]

In 2012 amid heavy financial losses, Nokia laid off a third of Salo's 3,500 workforce and gradually shifted manufacturing to Asia. It had a negative impact on the town with unemployment rising. In 2010 Nokia accounted for 95% of the town's corporate tax income, amounting to €60 million, but this dropped to just €14 million by 2012.[9] By the end of the year Salo no longer produced hardware and became a research and development centre.

After the centre was in the hands of Microsoft Mobile, layoffs continued and eventually in June 2015 Microsoft announced the closure of the plant, putting the jobs of the 1,100 employees at risk. By this time Salo's unemployment rate was 15%, and the layoffs could push that further to 20%. Solidarity was expressed by some Finnish politicians after Salo's decline, which also came amid Finland's slow post-2008 crisis economy.[10]

Sports

The city is home to the professional basketball team Salon Vilpas Vikings, which plays in the Finish 1st Division Korisliiga. It plays its home games in the Salohalli. The most important orienteering club is Angelniemen Ankkuri, which organizes the Halikko relay every autumn.

Transportation

European route E18 runs through Salo, passing the city center a few kilometers North, but the national road 52 between Raseborg and Somero goes through the city center. The "Coastal Railway" from Helsinki to Turku and further to Turku Harbour crosses the town center; all InterCity trains and most of the high-speed Pendolino trains stop at Salo railway station. The closest airports are Turku Airport (limited number of domestic and international flights) and Helsinki-Vantaa Airport.

In 2016, the city of Salo signed a letter of intent with Los Angeles-based company Virgin Hyperloop One in order to launch a project to build a 50 km long Hyperloop tube between Salo and Turku.[11]

Events

In recent years, the town of Salo has become known for the popular Kurpitsaviikot ("Pumpkin Weeks"), which are organized in Halikko in every autumn.[12] At the local field, thousands of different sizes pumpkins and carved jack-o'-lanterns are presented to tourists.[13] [14] [15] The event celebrating Halloween culture has gathered audiences from all over Finland, from Hanko to Ivalo,[16] [17] [13] and for example, the event organized in 2020 had as many as 100,000 visitors.[18] The event has also been noticed abroad, all the way to North America.[19]

International relations

See main article: List of twin towns and sister cities in Finland.

Twin towns — eleven cities

Salo has eight sister cities:[20]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Paikkala. Sirkka. 2018-06-19. Etunimien ajankuva. Virittäjä. 122. 2. 10.23982/vir.68985. 2242-8828. free.
  2. Book: Forbes, Elizabeth. Salminen, Matti. 2001. Oxford University Press. Oxford Music Online. 10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.41977 .
  3. Alifrosti, Kari (1996). "Salon ja Uskelan historia 1869-1990", Salon Kaupunki. .
  4. Web site: Population growth biggest in nearly 70 years . 2024-04-26 . Population structure . Statistics Finland . 1797-5395 . 2024-04-29 .
  5. Web site: Number of foreign-language speakers grew by nearly 38,000 persons . 31 May 2023 . Statistics Finland . 12 September 2023 . en .
  6. https://pxdata.stat.fi/PXWeb/pxweb/en/StatFin/StatFin__vaerak/statfin_vaerak_pxt_11ra.px Key figures on population by region, 1990-2023
  7. Web site: Nokia's New Mobile Phones Factory Opened in Salo - Nokia. Nokia. 24 December 2017.
  8. Web site: Lines go silent in Finnish town of Salo as Microsoft shuts Nokia phone. Uk.reuters.com. 24 December 2017.
  9. Web site: Nokia layoffs have big impact on small town in Finland. Theverge.com. 24 December 2017.
  10. Web site: Microsoft has crushed the economic hopes of Finland's Salo as it closes its Nokia plant and jeopardises 1,100 jobs. Uk.businessinsider.com. 24 December 2017.
  11. Web site: Hyperloop between Finland, Sweden would cost €19bn. 2021-01-27. www.helsinkitimes.fi. en-gb.
  12. Web site: Kurpitsaviikot. Facebook. 5 November 2022.
  13. Web site: Halikko muuttui halloween-kyläksi. Janica. Vilen. Haloo maaseutu. 22 October 2020. 5 November 2022. fi.
  14. Web site: Upea näky: Yli 500 kurpitsaa hohtaa pellolla – "Salo taitaa olla nyt Suomen amerikkalaisin kaupunki". Kari. Kauppinen. Iltalehti. 27 October 2019. 5 November 2022. fi.
  15. Web site: "Aivan absurdi paikka!" – helsinkiläiset taivastelivat kurpitsajuhlia Salossa Rannikon pellon reunassa. Minna. Filppu. Salon Seudun Sanomat. 11 October 2022. 5 November 2022. fi.
  16. Web site: Salon kurpitsapuistossa väkeä jo Hangosta Ivaloon – ukrainalaisten koristelemat kurpitsat ihastuttavat. Minna. Rosvall. Yle. 12 October 2022. 5 November 2022. fi.
  17. Web site: Halikkolaista peltoa valaisee tuhat upeaa kurpitsalyhtyä: "Piristystä pimenevään syksyyn". Antti. Halonen. Iltalehti. 16 October 2020. 5 November 2022. fi.
  18. Web site: Kurpitsat hehkuvat läpi yön halikkolaisella pellolla – someilmiö kiinnosti viime vuonna 100 000 kävijää. Minna. Rosvall. Yle. 13 October 2021. 5 November 2022. fi.
  19. Web site: Pellolle ilmestyi karmivankaunis näky, joka hämmästyttää ulkomailla asti: "On villinnyt koko Salon". Anna-Maija. Naakka. Ilta-Sanomat. 13 October 2021. 5 November 2022. fi.
  20. Web site: Kahdenkeskiset kaupunkisuhteet . City of Salo . 22 August 2019 . fi .