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Aarno Ruusuvuori

Aarno Ruusuvuori
AarnoRuusuvuori.jpg
Born Aarno Emil Ruusuvuori
(1925-01-14)14 January 1925
Helsinki, Finland
Died 22 February 1992(1992-02-22) (aged 67)
Nationality Finnish
Occupation Architect
Practice Arkkitehtitoimisto Aarno Ruusuvuori
Buildings Tapiola Church, Espoo
Weilin & Göös Print Works, Espoo
Helsinki City Hall, Helsinki
Hyvinkää Church
Projects Helsinki City Hall restoration and modernization, Helsinki
Finnish National Museum extension

Aarno Emil Ruusuvuori (14 January 1925, Kuopio – 22 February 1992, Helsinki) was a Finnish architect, professor and director of the Museum of Finnish Architecture. He studied at Helsinki University of Technology, completing his studies in 1951.

Aarno Ruusuvuori was one of the central architects in Finland during the 1960s, well known for designing modern buildings, often using exposed concrete, often in a Brutalist style. His best-known works are the Weilin & Göös Print Works in Espoo (1964–66) and the Hyvinkää Church (1961).

Ruusuvuori courted much controversy during the early 1970s with his ambitious plans for the modernisation of the Helsinki City Hall in the very centre of Helsinki. The City Hall takes up an entire city block, consisting mostly of several buildings built in the neo-classical style, including buildings designed by C.L. Engel. Ruusuvuori preserved the main festival hall, but demolished many of the interiors, preserving only their facades. This saga, together with many other developments where historical buildings were demolished was captured in an influential book by architects Vilhelm Helander and Mikael Sundman, titled Kenen Helsinki? (Whose Helsinki?) (1970). Ruusuvuori continued to work on the large scheme throughout the 1970s, completing it in 1988, but toned down the scale of the earlier proposed demolitions.

The Weilin & Göös Print Works (1964–66), Espoo, designed by Ruusuvuori, was closed down at the end of the 20th century. It was then purchased by the City of Espoo, who had it converted into the WeeGee Exhibition Centre, for culture and the arts, which opened its doors to the public in October 2006.

Hyvinkää Church, Hyvinkää

Huutoniemi Church, Vaasa

Weilin & Göös Print Works, Espoo

Tapiola Church, Espoo


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