Urheilupuisto metro station explained

Urheilupuisto
Native Name:Idrottsparken
Type:Helsinki metro station
Style:Helsinki Metro
Address:Jousenpuistonkatu 2
Tapiola, Espoo
Other:HSL buses 114, 115/A, 118N, 119
Structure:Deep single-vault
Platform:island platform
Tracks:2
Opened:18 November 2017
Accessible:Yes
Owned:Helsinki City Transport
Passengers:7,000 daily[1]

Urheilupuisto (Finnish) or Idrottsparken (Swedish) (lit. English "Sports park") is an underground metro station in Espoo on the Länsimetro (‘Western Metro’) extension of Helsinki metro. The station is located in western Tapiola, at the northern edge of Jousenpuisto Park and south of the Tapiolan Urheilupuisto (; ‘Tapiola Sports Park‘). A 790-space car park was built next to the metro station and offers elevator access to the station.

The station was designed by HKP Architects, in collaboration with many other design firms.[2] [3] During the design stage, the station was known as Jousenpuisto, after the park at its immediate south. The shape of the station building allows natural light to enter at street level and reach down to the platform level via the escalators.[4] The metro station has won several international design awards as part of the eight-station first phase of the Länsimetro.

Urheilupuisto is unique among metro stations in Espoo, as it is not built into the bedrock.[5] The station platform is located at a depth of about 27 meters below street level. Urheilupuisto station was designed to operate with only one entrance (on the western side of the building) but, in response to passenger feedback, an entrance was constructed in the eastern side and opened on 29 February 2020.[6] The station is located 1,1 kilometres east from Niittykumpu metro station and 1,3 kilometres west from Tapiola metro station.

References

Content in this article is translated from the existing Finnish Wikipedia article at ; see its history for attribution.

External links

60.1748°N 24.7803°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Metron kävijämäärät asemittain vuonna 2019. City of Helsinki . 2020-02-07. 2020-05-30.
  2. Web site: Designers: Ruoholahti–Matinkylä section. Länsimetro. en-GB. 2020-05-30.
  3. Web site: Project: Urheilupuiston metroasema. hkp.fi. en-US. 2020-05-30.
  4. Web site: Urheilupuisto station. Länsimetro. en-GB. 2020-05-31.
  5. Web site: Urheilupuisto metro station. 2018-01-18. City of Helsinki. en. 2020-05-30.
  6. Web site: Urheilupuisto metro station's new eastern entrance opens on the weekend. 2020-03-03. Länsimetro. en-GB. 2020-05-31.