Helsinki

🇫🇮 Finland
🌍 Northern Europe
🏢 Coastal

About

Helsinki, the capital of Finland, is a leading Nordic city recognized for its high quality of life, functional design, and digital innovation. Located on the Baltic Sea, it combines urban density with access to nature and coastal landscapes. Helsinki is a pioneer in smart city solutions, open data, and carbon neutrality goals, aiming to become one of the most sustainable and technologically advanced cities in the world.

Additional Information

Helsinki is Finland’s capital (population 660 000, metropolitan area 1.5 million) and consistently ranks amongst the world’s most liveable and digital cities. It operates Forum Virium Helsinki — a publicly funded urban innovation organisation — to co-develop and pilot smart city solutions with companies and residents. The Kalasatama district serves as a living-lab where citizens actively co-design digital services targeting one hour of saved daily time per resident.

City Snapshot

Population

689758

Area

214 km2

Density

3223/km2

Altitude

26 m

Weather

Temperatures (°C)

Rainfall (mm)

Strategic Vision and Achivements

Helsinki’s Intelligent Helsinki strategy (updated 2023) aims to make the city carbon-neutral by 2030 and a global leader in smart, human-centric urban services. Key achievements include Forum Virium Helsinki (a public-private co-creation platform), the Kalasatama smart district (energy, health, and mobility pilots), Helsinki Region Infoshare (one of Europe’s most open municipal data portals), and consistent top rankings in the IMD Smart City Index.

Challenges

Challenges are defined by cities to clearly express the urban issues they are facing. They describe specific needs and contexts, helping innovators, companies, and organizations understand the problem and propose relevant, tailored solutions.
Helsinki has not published any challenges yet.

Experimental Capacity

Pilots

Pilots are real-life implementations of selected solutions in cities. They allow stakeholders to test ideas in real conditions, measure their impact, learn from the results, and determine whether the solution can be improved, replicated, or scaled to other contexts.
No pilots have been launched yet for Helsinki.
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