CHRISTMAS VILLAGE BRINGS LIGHT TO DECEMBER DARKNESS IN MY HELSINKI FINLAND NEIGHBOURHOOD

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Lots of activity on the normally very quiet streets in my Helsinki Finland Village Marttila – Martas in Swedish. The village is part of the Pitäjänmäki – Sockenbacka region of the Finnish Capital.

Lots of people have come here all through December. The reason is our annual Christmas Village where we want to bring light and happiness in the midst of our dark times. Actually it is dark here also in reality, with sun rising around 10 am and setting only some five or six hours later.

Before Christmas, many daycare and school groups moved from one small exhibit to another and when it got dark in the afternoons families and also many elderly people visited to enjoy this magic season. During the holidays even more people have come here for a pleasant walk. This will now continue also for the first January week.

The main media in the Finnish capital have picked up our Christmas Village, both on TV and in the large daily newspapers. This has created lots of interest and one can see that people come also from far away. Actually, we haven’t thought that this is a really big attraction but apparently the small exhibits and twinkling lights are popular and we get many nice comments. Of course, all is Covid-secured, people move outdoors, the streets are broad like the use to be in this country, and distances are carefully held.

There are just over 100 family homes here, surrounded by large green gardens. In earlier years the families produced their own fruits and vegetables and Marttila is still filled with old apple trees and berry bushes.

The village was originally built by war veterans returning from the front in the mid 1940s after the wars with the Soviet Union. Many of the houses were built by the Red Cross, for those who returned disabled. An important number of them were gifts from our neigbouring country Sweden, they are sometimes still called Sweden-houses.

The other half of this village was built by the returning soldiers themselves, and their families. These are a bit larger and all of them share the same construction. Today, the street views are protected and one still gets an impression of how it was before. Only two of the houses have been built later, after fires destroyed the earlier ones.

Even if Marttila looks old fashioned in many ways it is also one of the most modern suburban areas in Helsinki. Two years ago we won the prestigious European Broadband Award for our fast fibre network where several service providers compete – there are 4 fibres which is unusual for nets like this – and where we also offer high quality public TV connections. This network was built by ourselves, with much voluntary work, and is now owned by our residents’ cooperative. And no, we never received any support, neither from the Finnish government, nor by the European Union.

So here residents have created a Christmas Village with exhibitions, lights and short stories telling about the many secrets that hide around this idyllic place. 

YOUNG FIREFIGHTERS OF THE FUTURE TRAINING AT THE PITÄJÄNMÄKI – SOCKENBACKA VOLUNTARY FIRE BRIGADE

Just back from a walk to our Helsinki Finland village voluntary fire brigade Pitäjänmäen VPK – Sockenbacka FBK. Established 110 years ago in 1908, it used to be connected to the traditional smoke stack industry in this old community. ( 25 September 2019 )

Now times have changed but the fire brigade continues its active service. It is linked to the Helsinki Rescue Department, but works on a voluntary basis.

Like other voluntary fire brigades, ours has at times had difficulties in recruiting new young members. The intervention brigade has worked fine, but youth has been absent. Now finally, a youth group has started under the skilled and enthusiastic leadership of the fire brigade president Henrik Helenius.

Today I saw a small but happy group of young villagers taking their first steps on the road to become an active fire brigade volunteer. This was a really pleasant and positive experience. It is great that there are experienced and skilled people like Henrik who devote their time and energy to these important activities.

And yes, the voluntary fire brigade in Pitäjänmäki – Sockenbacka has a shining red fire engine and a crew bus, and yes they do all kinds of emergencies and community services as well, not only practice sessions.

Frontmannaby i Helsingfors vann EU-pris för sitt datanät

Europeiska bredbandspriset 2017


En frontmannaby i Sockenbacka i Helsingfors har fått EU:s stora Bredbandspris 2017, i en av fem tävlingskategorier. Priset tilldelades för ett snabbt fibernät som förenar över hundra egnahemshus i området, och som är öppet för priskonkurrens mellan teleoperatörer. 

Vid en ceremoni på en Europeisk datakonferens i Bryssel i början av veckan (20-21.11.) överräckte tre EU-komissionsmedlemmar tillsammans priset till data-aktivisterna från Helsingfors.

Det lilla Sockenbacka-kooperativet väckte positiv uppmärksamhet för både sin initiativrikedom och det goda projektresultatet. Med fyra fibrer till varje hushåll och mycket snabba dataförbindelser är nätet redan nu långt över de mål som EU har ställt upp för de kommande åren.

De flesta övriga deltagarna i tävlingen var ministerier eller privata storföretag. Projekten var ofta EU-finansierade och datatjänsterna begränsade till en teleoperatör. Det finländska kooperativet är däremot helt finansierat av invånarna själva. Kostnaderna har hållits nere genom ett omfattande frivilligarbete både inom projektledning och nätverksbygge. 

Det prestigefyllda bredbandspriset – European Broadband Awards – tilldelas vartannat år till de fem bästa projekten i medlemsländerna. De två andra finalisterna i sockenbackabornas kategori var Ungerns utvecklingsministerium och en stor irländsk teleoperatör, båda med internationellt finansierade jätteprojekt. fff