Architecture and Design Museum Helsinki shortlist news, Finnish building project architects images
New Architecture and Design Museum in Helsinki
17 June 2025
Five developed proposals revealed in final phase of design competition for Finland’s New Museum of Architecture and Design in Helsinki
Helsinki Building Design Proposals:
Museum of Finnish Architecture Designs News
Helsinki, 17 June 2025 – Five developed proposals for Finland’s New Museum of Architecture and Design in Helsinki have been unveiled for a final round of public feedback.
The anonymous proposals have been prepared during the final phase of the international, open, design competition to find a design team for a new 10,050 sq m museum building that will be constructed on the Makasiiniranta waterfront, in Helsinki’s historically significant South Harbour district.
Members of the public can submit comments until 31 July via the City of Helsinki’s Kerrokantasi (Voice your opinion) online platform https://kerrokantasi.hel.fi/ad-museo2025. A summary of the public input will be compiled and shared with the competition jury before the winner is selected. The result of the competition will be announced on 11 September 2025, after which the design process will continue based on the winning proposal.
The central mission of the new museum will be “democratising the tools of design”, and the competition has been participatory from the outset: museum audiences and professionals from various disciplines have been widely consulted, with their insight shaping both the competition brief and the museum’s conceptual development. During the second stage, proposals have been assessed through a multidisciplinary lens. Beyond architecture and cityscape, the jury has considered perspectives related to urban culture, design education, and how to better serve groups with special needs.
The open phase of the competition launched in April 2024, attracting 624 submissions from around the world. The five finalists were first announced in December 2024 and are named City, Sky & Sea; Kumma; Moby; Tau; and Tyrsky. The process of developing the proposals began in February 2025, following an opportunity for public feedback, which was communicated to the design teams alongside guidance from the jury and project team.
Kaarina Gould, CEO of the Foundation for the Finnish Museum of Architecture and Design, said:
“The aim of the competition is to design a new museum building in a fair and transparent way. Finland has a strong tradition of anonymous architectural competitions, which allows the jury to focus entirely on the content of the proposals. Within the framework of anonymity, we wanted to give the design teams an opportunity for direct engagement with future museum users through a series of workshops, which we believe have led to stronger proposals. It will be truly exciting to see and hear what the people of Helsinki — and anyone interested in the new museum — think of the final submissions.
“Design and architecture are such fundamental parts of Finnish identity that this competition is about much more than a building. It’s a long-term investment in our cultural heritage and shared future. Even during construction, the project will create jobs and drive economic growth, and once open in 2030, the museum will become a key attraction for Helsinki and Finland”
Mikko Aho, Chair of the competition jury, said:
“During phase 2 of the design competition, the jury gave thorough feedback on each of the five proposals. Our focus was on three priorities: firstly, on developing the functionality of the museum spaces so that they are adaptable for future needs. Secondly on how the building interacts with it’s surroundings, creating an inviting urban environment, and thirdly on setting the right ambition level in creating a climate-resilient building. Our task now is to evaluate how the proposals meet the goals of the competition.”
The new museum of architecture and design in Helsinki will draw on the rich traditions and contemporary strength of design and architecture in Finland and the Nordic region. It will offer engaging programs that reveal the relevance and potential of design in a changing world. The new building will also host high-profile touring exhibitions and offer attractive public services, from a design library to an open-access summer terrace.
The competition brief tasked participants with designing a museum that meets the urban and architectural demands of this historically important site, while also delivering on the museum’s goals of being flexible, inclusive, and welcoming.
Sustainability — ecological, social, and cultural — is a key principle guiding both the design and construction of the new museum. Helsinki has committed to becoming carbon neutral by 2030, and the museum project actively supports this goal across its operations.
AD Museum Design Competition YouTube film – 60 seconds long video on e-architect
Background:
Helsinki Building Design Proposals
City, Sky and Sea
Due to its curved walls and roof, the new building gives a tent-like impression. The façades of the building consist of cast panels made from recycled glass. The museum has been designed with a large staircase in the central lobby and exhibition spaces around it following the curved forms of the facades. In addition to a translucent glass roof, two terraces have been placed on the roof—one facing the Market Square and the other facing the sea.
Kumma:
The new museum building has been designed to be compact and low in height, preserving views from Tähtitorninvuori Park towards the Market Square and Katajanokka. The proposal’s slanted, stepped walls, and the triangular forms of the facade continue into the interior and the main stairs. The exhibition floor overlooks the sea from a large terrace, which continues as a wrap-around outdoor gallery and balcony.
Moby
The new building is designed with a wedge-shaped footprint, leaving space on the side for views from the waterfront towards Tähtitorninvuori Park. The interior of the building offers large views of the surroundings. The façade of the building is made of recycled light-bricks. On the roof is a large terrace with a view of the sea.
Tau
The rectangular building is low in its height and the large glass facades connect the interior of the museum to the building’s surroundings. The building materials are glass, granite and different wood materials such as birch and pine. There is a large terrace on the roof.
Tyrsky
The building, with its curved roof and zinc-sheet cladding consists of rectangular volumes. In the middle of the building, there is a small inner courtyard, which also allows daylight into the centre of the building. The undulating roof draws inspiration from the sea and its rhythms. The proposal uses solid timber for both load-bearing structures and interior surfaces.
Finland’s New Museum of Architecture and Design – Helsinki Building
The new museum of architecture and design in Helsinki, Finland, is planned to open in 2030. A major step in the process of establishing the new institution was completed in January 2024, with the successful merger of the Museum of Finnish Architecture and Design Museum Helsinki. The newly-formed collection contains over 900,000 artefacts, including objects, correspondence, models and photographs documenting the work of internationally-famed practitioners such as Aino and Alvar Aalto, Eero Aarnio, Maija Isola, Eliel and Eero Saarinen, Paavo Tynell, and design brands such as Marimekko, Nokia and Fiskars.
Both the City of Helsinki and the State of Finland have committed to backing the new museum with significant donations. Four private foundations have joined forces, with the total capital raised almost reaching the target of 150 million euros.
In January 2025 it was announced that Pilvi Kalhama has been appointed Director of Architecture & Design Museum Helsinki, and will play a key role as the inaugural director of Finland’s new Museum of Architecture and Design. Kalhama will commence her new role on 4 August 2025.
The new museum building will house state-of-the-art exhibitions and forward-looking programmes that draw on the history and present of Finnish and Nordic architecture and design to guide a programme of public activities that will look at how design thinking and skills are relevant to the challenges we face as individuals and societies in a rapidly changing world.
Project Budget and Competition Remuneration
The total budget of the project is around €105 million, with construction costs of the museum not to exceed €70 million (price level Sept 2023). Construction is timetabled to complete by 2030.
Each team selected for Stage 2 receives a payment of €50,000 in two instalments: €30,000 at the beginning of Stage 2 and €20,000 on completion. At the end of the competition the Jury will award prizes of €50,000, €35,000 and €25,000 for first, second and third place, with purchase options of €20,000 for the remaining two designs.
https://www.admuseo.fi/competition
Instagram: @admuseo
Competition Jury
Chair: Mikko Aho, Architect SAFA, Real Estate Company ADM (Vice Chair of the Board)
Vice Chair: Juha Lemström, Architect SAFA, Real Estate Company ADM (Chair of the Board)
Gus Casely-Hayford, Director, V&A East
Beatrice Galilee, Architect, Executive Director, The World Around
Kaarina Gould, CEO, Foundation for the Finnish Museum of Architecture and Design
Salla Hoppu, Architect SAFA, Leading Architect, City of Helsinki
Riitta Kaivosoja, Master of Laws with court training
Beate Hølmebakk, Architect, Professor, Partner, Manthey Kula Architects
Matti Kuittinen, Architect, Associate Professor, Aalto University
Miklu Silvanto, Designer, AD Museum Ltd. (Member of the Board)
Anni Sinnemäki, Member and vice chair of the Helsinki City Council
Sari Nieminen, Architect SAFA, Architectural Office Sari Nieminen
Hannu Tikka, Architect SAFA, Professor, APRT Architects
New Architecture and Design Museum Helsinki images / information received 170625
Previously on e-architect:
3 June 2020
New Architecture and Design Museum in Helsinki News
The new Architecture and Design Museum progresses towards realization in Helsinki
The Finnish government has signalled its commitment to participating in the capitalization of the new Architecture and Design Museum. The fourth supplementary budget proposal for 2020 is part of the Finnish government’s coronavirus pandemic follow-up package, with which the government will support the economically, ecologically and socially sustainable recovery from the crisis.
The decision on the new museum has been much welcomed by the Museum of Finnish Architecture and the Design Museum Helsinki. It is hoped that the new museum will be open to the public in 2025.
“It is a significant decision when the state is so strongly committed to the realization of the new Architecture and Design Museum. In the museums, we are now focusing our efforts on playing our part in rebuilding Finland in the midst of the crisis that affects everyone. We will do our outmost to make the museum a place for everyone”, state Reetta Heiskanen, from the Museum of Finnish Architecture, and Jukka Savolainen, from the Design Museum Helsinki.
The new Architecture and Design Museum is being planned for the South Harbour in Helsinki. It aims to bring together the existing museums and their collections and create a new and globally unique place that would attract visitors from both home and abroad.
portrait of the directors from both museums – Reetta Heiskanen on the left and Jukka Savolainen on the right:
With the decision now made, the state undertakes to participate in the capitalization of the new Architecture and Design Museum, to be established for a maximum budget of EUR 60 million.
The first study commissioned jointly by the Ministry of Education and Culture and the City of Helsinki was published in August 2018, and the next step was taken in March 2019, with the publication of a preliminary concept and proposal for an implementation model. The state decision is the next significant step towards the new museum.
“In the view of the museums, the next step is joint discussions with the Ministry of Education an Culture and the City of Helsinki, and to advance the project further towards the establishment of a project organization, as well as further development of the operating model. The goal is for the museum to be open to the public in 2025”
For more information:
Reetta Heiskanen, Museum of Finnish Architecture, tel. +358 (0)50 544 9094, e-mail reetta.heiskanen@mfa.fi
Jukka Savolainen, Design Museum Helsinki, tel. +358 (0)50 307 0455, e-mail jukka.savolainen@designmuseum.fi
New Architecture and Design Museum Helsinki images / information received 030620
Previously on e-architect:
Museum of Finnish Architecture News
Museum of Finnish Architecture Exhibition
Museum of Finnish Architecture Exhibition
New Architecture and Design Museum Complex in Helsinki Proposal
New Architecture and Design Museum Complex in Helsinki
The Museum of Finnish Architecture Eero Saarinen Honorary Lecture 2017 by Architect Sebastián Irarrázaval
photo © Sebastian Irarrazaval Arquitectos
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