Five Designs Shortlisted for Finland’s New Museum of Architecture and Design in Helsinki

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Aerial view of the five entries shortlisted for Stage 2. 

  • Five designs have been shortlisted in the international open competition to design a home for Finland’s new national museum of architecture and design on a prominent and historic site on Helsinki’s South Harbour.
     
  • The teams selected for Stage 2 of the competition will receive an award of €50,000 each to develop their proposals. At the end of the competition the jury will distribute three prize positions and two purchases, totalling €150,000.

The Foundation for the Finnish Museum of Architecture and Design and the Real Estate Company ADM have announced the 5 shortlisted designs that will progress to Stage 2 of their international open design competition for a new museum building in Helsinki’s South Harbour.

The shortlisted projects have been selected from 624 responses to an open call for entries, which asked for conceptual proposals for a new 10,050 sq m (GFA) museum building on a prominent and historic site in Helsinki’s South Harbour. All entries were submitted anonymously and were displayed on a public website since September 2024.

The shortlisted competition entries are:

096 Tyrsky

351 Kumma   

486 Moby

545 Tau

616 City, Sky and Sea

Detailed information about each shortlisted proposal is contained in notes to editors. The competition remains anonymous through Stage 2.

Kaarina Gould, CEO of the Finnish Architecture and Design Museum Foundation and member of the jury, said:

"We are immensely grateful for the response to our international design competition and want to thank each of the 624 teams that answered our call and submitted their ideas for a new museum building on our extraordinary site in Helsinki’s South Harbour. Reducing the list to just five entries has been a challenging yet inspiring exercise in identifying the greatest potential amongst hundreds of interesting approaches. A massive thank you also to fellow jury members for their commitment – the work continues.”

Gus Casely-Hayford, jury panel member and Director of V&A East, said:

“The new museum represents a generational opportunity for the architecture and design sector in Finland, and it arrives at what feels like a moment of wider intellectual and cultural reckoning. The requirements, the need, the opportunities are profound, and enormously exciting. The jury leant into the challenge, interrogating the vast body of proposals to identify this truly exceptional shortlist. These are intriguing projects that feel both timely and timeless, a shortlist of buildings that I hope Finland will be beguiled by.”

Beate Hølmebakk, jury panel member, architect, professor and partner at Manthey Kula in Oslo said:

“The five finalist projects represent different visions for an inviting and inspirational museum situated on one of Helsinki’s most important sites. What these entries share is their potential to be buildings of extraordinary and lasting architectural quality. It is the jury’s opinion that they all have distinct urban presence and exceptional spatial properties that allow the new museum of architecture and design to organize the rich variety of exhibitions and events their ambition calls for. In the next phase these projects will be further developed to meet the demands for a sustainable future.”

The proposals that have advanced to stage 2 of the competition will go through further development. The shortlisted design teams develop their proposals into viable concepts for a new museum building based on feedback from the jury and experts.

Special attention will be paid to the low-carbon nature of the buildings and the use of circular economy, for example through carbon footprint calculations. To better cultivate the usability of the buildings, a series of workshops will be arranged with the design teams and representatives of various user groups, facilitated by Tommi Laitio, a Los Angeles based expert on public innovation.

The public also has a possibility to comment on the proposals until January 31, 2025 at https://kerrokantasi.hel.fi/ad-museo. A summary of the public discussion will be handed to the competition design teams to support the development of their proposal.

Only main visuals and concepts of the shortlisted proposals are made available for public display. The jury has had access to more extensive material, including floor plans, site plans, and other documents requested in the competition brief.

Stage 2 of the competition will open in February 2025 and run until the end of May 2025. The final result of the competition will be announced in September 2025.

Each team selected for Stage 2 will receive 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


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NOTES TO EDITORS

096 Tyrsky

The curved-roofed building, clad entirely in green copper, blends seamlessly into the waterfront landscape and respects the existing surroundings with its moderate height. The structure consists of several rectangular interlocking volumes, creating a small inner courtyard that allows daylight to reach the center of the building. The undulating curved roof signifies that this is a public building, distinct from the neighboring blocks. The proposal is an excellent example of the use of mass timber in load-bearing structures and interior finishes.

351 Kumma

The new museum building has been designed as a compact and low structure, preserving important views from Tähtitorninvuori Park towards the Market Square and Katajanokka. Despite its low height, the building has a strong character. It is beautifully proportioned, with slanted, stepped walls and triangular openings that reference timeless historical themes. Unlike the other proposals, the building can be accessed from both the Market Square and Laivasillankatu sides, allowing visitors to enter directly into the ground-floor exhibition space.

486 Moby

The proposal takes an exceptional stance on views from the site and the museum’s role as a public building alongside the blocks planned for Makasiiniranta. The new building has a wedge-shaped footprint, leaving space on the side for views from the waterfront toward Tähtitorninvuori Park. The movement of museum visitors between spaces has been carefully designed, and the views opening in different directions from the building have been thoughtfully considered. Thanks to its compact form, logical structural system, and use of recycled materials, the building is resource-efficient.

545 Tau

The building is sculptural in its extreme simplicity. It demonstrates that to stand out from the surrounding urban fabric a landmark status can be achieved without relying on unconventional shapes, or distinctive materials. The design emphasizes the role of the new museum as an extension of the Market Square, welcoming visitor flows along its entire northern façade, which connects seamlessly to the water mirror of the Vironallas basin.

616 City, Sky and Sea

Thanks to its curved wall and roof surfaces, the new building appears tent-like and lightweight

in the waterfront landscape, where it fits naturally in front of the existing block frontage. The museum is designed with a distinctive and strong spatial structure: the exhibition spaces surrounding the central hall offer carefully selected views of the sea and the surrounding city.

ABOUT THE NEW MUSEUM OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN

The new museum of architecture and design in Helsinki, Finland, is planned to open in 2030 and will combine the Museum of Finnish Architecture and Design Museum Helsinki. The newly-formed collection will contain 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.

The central mission of the new museum will be “democratising the tools of design”, drawing 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.

A new museum building near the historic harbour in central Helsinki will house state-of-the-art exhibitions and forward-looking programmes. With new technologies, the whole world can participate in the conversation. 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.

Helsinki is committed to being carbon neutral by 2030. The guiding principles in building, planning, and programming the new museum are based on environmental, cultural and social sustainability.

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Quotes

We are immensely grateful for the response to our international design competition and want to thank each of the 624 teams that answered our call and submitted their ideas for a new museum building on our extraordinary site in Helsinki’s South Harbour. Reducing the list to just five entries has been a challenging yet inspiring exercise in identifying the greatest potential amongst hundreds of interesting approaches. A massive thank you also to fellow jury members for their commitment – the work continues.
Kaarina Gould, CEO of the Finnish Architecture and Design Museum Foundation and member of the jury
The new museum represents a generational opportunity for the architecture and design sector in Finland, and it arrives at what feels like a moment of wider intellectual and cultural reckoning. The requirements, the need, the opportunities are profound, and enormously exciting. The jury leant into the challenge, interrogating the vast body of proposals to identify this truly exceptional shortlist. These are intriguing projects that feel both timely and timeless, a shortlist of buildings that I hope Finland will be beguiled by.
Gus Casely-Hayford, jury panel member and Director of V&A East
The five finalist projects represent different visions for an inviting and inspirational museum situated on one of Helsinki’s most important sites. What these entries share is their potential to be buildings of extraordinary and lasting architectural quality. It is the jury’s opinion that they all have distinct urban presence and exceptional spatial properties that allow the new museum of architecture and design to organize the rich variety of exhibitions and events their ambition calls for. In the next phase these projects will be further developed to meet the demands for a sustainable future.
Beate Hølmebakk, jury panel member, architect, professor and partner at Manthey Kula in Oslo