Slideshow: Exposed wood structures highlight Helsinki edifice
Click on the image to open

Photo By Kalle Kouhia

Click on the image to open

Photo By Kalle Kouhia

Click on the image to open

Photo By Kalle Kouhia

Click on the image to open

Photo By Kalle Kouhia

Click on the image to open

Photo By Kalle Kouhia

Click on the image to open

Photo By Kalle Kouhia

Click on the image to open

Photo By Kalle Kouhia

Click on the image to open

Photo By Kalle Kouhia

HELSINKI — Katajanokan Laituri is a solid wood office and hotel building that sets an example in the possibilities of wood construction in a sensitive urban environment.

It continues the uniform, neo-classical silhouette of Helsinki along its southern waterfront, while the meandering shapes of its façade break its scale, connecting it to the diverse and layered building stock of the Katajanokka peninsula. A double structure on the façade, with an outer layer of glass, aluminum, and granite that protects the exposed wood structures from the maritime weather, connects the building to the wider cityscape and gives it a unique character that changes with the time of day and the four seasons.

The four-story building was designed as the new head office of the lNordic forestry company Stora Enso, and half of it is occupied by a hotel. The street-level spaces connect to the surrounding city on both sides and feature a large, shared open foyer, restaurant, café, and conference spaces. The exposed spruce structures, together with careful spruce and ash detailing, exhibit the natural diversity of wood as a building material. The design of the interior has been guided by a preference for materials that are natural, sustainable, and will age beautifully. Besides wood, the light gray granite used on the facades and on the pavement outside, as well as inside, connects the building to its urban environment. The outdoor spaces of the building are inspired by northern nature and feature a birch grove in the courtyard and archipelago meadows on the rooftop.

The project was guided by the objective of minimizing climate impacts over a long lifecycle and making the best use of renewable resources and materials. The building’s above-ground structures utilize standard, industrial, prefabricated Stora Enso massive wood products customized for pioneering structural and architectural solutions. The post-beam frame and the structure for the façade are made of Laminated Veneer Lumber (LVL) produced in Varkaus, Finland. The inner walls and lift- and staircase shafts that stiffen the structure, as well as the floor and roof structures, are made of Cross Laminated Timber (CLT) produced in Gruvön, Sweden. The entire frame consists of 7,600 cubic meters of spruce and 2,500 wood elements.

Have something to say? Share your thoughts with us in the comments below.

Profile picture for user richchristianson
About the author
Rich Christianson | President/Owner/C-Level

Rich Christianson is the owner of Richson Media LLC, a Chicago-based communications firm focused on the industrial woodworking sector. Rich is the former long-time editorial director and associate publisher of Woodworking Network. During his nearly 35-year career, Rich has toured more than 250 woodworking operations throughout North America, Europe and Asia and has written extensively on woodworking technology, design and supply trends. He has also directed and promoted dozens of woodworking trade shows, conferences and seminars including the Cabinets & Closets Conference & Expo and the Woodworking Machinery & Supply Conference & Expo, Canada’s largest woodworking show.