The mean annual temperature in efficient, elegant Helsinki
hovers around 43°F (6°C), but this does not mean visitors need
expect a chilly welcome. The funky Finns, known for their hip and
happening sense of style, design and association with high
technology, know how to warm hearts and minds in their modern,
cosmopolitan capital.
The city, spread across a cluster of promontories and
peninsulas, is 450 years old, its clean, wide avenues lined with
buildings echoing centuries of architectural excellence from Gothic
through to art deco and cutting-edge contemporary. It all fits
together in total harmony with nature, which invades the urban
environment with green spaces, when it is not blanketed in snow.
Trees, flowers, hares, squirrels, pheasants and even the odd elk
are often spied in the myriad parks in the centre of the city, the
whole surrounded with crisp, unpolluted air and the bright blue
Baltic waters.
Despite the cold climate, the invigorating outdoors beckons in
Helsinki even in the middle of winter. Recreation takes the form of
skating, skiing, ice-fishing, sailing, cycling, soaking in saunas,
or, during the short-lived summer, sunbathing. After action, sit
tucked in a rug outside one of the many street-side bars sipping
hot 'gloggi' (spiced wine) and watch the wintry world go by. The
city is also ideal for walking, the sights all concentrated in the
central area beneath the towering cathedrals.
The great outdoors is also the setting for Helsinki's numerous
festivals and fairs, like the May Day Carnival, October Herring
Festival, the Helsinki City Marathon, annual Samba carnival and the
midsummer festival, to name but a few. Events do move indoors when
it comes to the city's rich cultural life, featuring some of the
world's finest orchestras and choirs, rock concerts, film
festivals, the Finnish National Opera and Ballet performances, and
the output of countless theatre and dance troupes.
Whether visited as a snowy winter wonderland or scenic
sun-splashed cityscape with almost permanent daylight, Helsinki is
a unique destination that will delight the heart of any
traveller.
Getting around: Helsinki has a simple and extremely efficient
public transport system, rated one of the best in Europe, making it
easy to hop onto trams, buses, the metro or a ferry with a single
ticket purchased from the driver, ticket machines or even by SMS on
a mobile phone. Special tourist tickets are available for visitors
allowing for one, three or five days unlimited use of the public
transport system. When the weather is good, why ride when you can
walk? The city is so compact and pleasant that getting around on
foot is an attractive option.






