Monday, October 10, 2005

Amuri Museum of Workers' Housing


Amuri Museum of Workers' Housing in Tampere

Amuri Museum of Workers' Housing presents workers' living conditions from the shared kitchens in 1800's to the 1970's.

The museum consists of five residential and four outbuildings. All of the former lie in their original positions as do three of the outbuildings.

Sunday, October 09, 2005

Rupriikki Media Museum


Rupriikki Media Museum in Tampere

The Rupriikki Museum provides an insight into the history and the development of mass communications and sheds light on how news is put together. Rupriikki also provides real, up-to-date information about the media and information on the background of various forms of communications.

in Rupriikki Media Museum

Central Museum of Labour

The Steam Engine Museum is the home of the Sulzer steam engine that was used as a power source at the Finlayson Factory. This giant of an engine is the biggest steam engine ever used in Finland.


This engine was manufactured by a Swiss company called Gebruder Sulzer in 1899 and at the beginning of the 20th century it generated energy for the spinnery as well for the new weaving mill.


At the time the Finlayson factory was the biggest factory in Finland (3000 employees).

The Factory gained its energy rather equally from three different sources: water turbines, the Sulzer engine and other steam engines in the Factory.

Central Museum of Labour in Tampere

Friday, October 07, 2005

Finlayson at night!

The visit of Czar Alexander I to the Tammerkoski on September 10th, 1819 had a favourable effect to the founding of the Finlayson Cotton Mill.

Finlayson in Tampere

In the old Finlayson textile mill, Panimoravintola Plevna is the most enjoyable place to dine in Tampere.

Thursday, October 06, 2005

Finlayson

The cotton mill industry started spinning in Tampere thanks to James Finlayson. The know-how and expertise of the Finlayson cotton mill soon made it Finland's first large scale industrial company and it became a city within Tampere with its own church, hospital and school.

Finlayson in Tampere

Today Finlayson area is an attractive destination for visitors. Inside of this little city I visited the Central Museum of Labour, the Rupriikki Media Museum and the Spy Museum.

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Good Night!


Arts and Crafts Center in Tampere

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

Tampere Tourist Office


Tampere Tourist Office

All major Finnish towns have a tourist office with helpful, English-speaking staff, English-language brochures and excellent free maps. Most offices publish a mini-guide to their town or region and all have a website (which usually http://www.NameOfTheTown.fi/).

If you are panning to visit some place in Finland, you could send an e-mail to the Tourist Office asking for brochures and free maps. They will answer you sending the required information for your home.

Monday, October 03, 2005

Manchester of the North!

The Swedish King Gustav III signed the founding document of the City of Tampere on 1/10/1779.

Tampere grew and became the main industrial centre of Finland in the 19th century.

The town's industrial nature in the 19th and 20th centuries gave it the nickname 'Manchester of the North.'

Tampere

Most of the Industries have now been transformed into superb cultural centres, bars and restaurants.

Sunday, October 02, 2005

Tampere


Tampere Town Hall

Tampere is the biggest Finnish city outside the Helsinki area and the biggest non-coastal Scandinavian city. Tampere is known as the Finnish Manchester because of its history of cotton and steel industry.

Friday, September 30, 2005

Portugal has moved up 2 places in the World Economic Forum's 2005 competitiveness rankings.
Finland remains the most competitive economy!


Portugal has moved up 2 places to 22 in the overall rankings.

Finland remains the most competitive economy in the world and tops the rankings for the third consecutive year in The Global Competitiveness Report 2005-2006. The United States is in second position, followed by Sweden, Denmark, Taiwan and Singapore, respectively.