Aalto Cities network

On the initiative of the Alvar Aalto Foundation and the City of Jyväskylä, Aalto Cities now have their own collaboration network, intended to increase Aalto awareness.

A total of eleven Finnish cities are involved in the first stage of the Aalto Cities network initiative. On Friday, February 3, 2017, the network’s founding document was signed in Jyväskylä by representatives of Alajärvi, Espoo, Eura, Helsinki, Jyväskylä, Kotka, Paimio, Pori, Rovaniemi and Seinäjoki. Varkaus will sign later in February 2017.

“The idea of an Aalto Cities network has been germinating for a long time now. There is a clear demand for this kind of city-to-city collaboration,” says Director of the Alvar Aalto Foundation Tommi Lindh.

Experimental House Muuratsalo (1952). Photo © Alvar Aalto Museum / Maija Holma
Aalto House, Helsinki (1936). Photo © Alvar Aalto Museum / Maija Holma
Alvar Aalto Museum, Jyväskylä (1973). Photo © Alvar Aalto Museum
University of Jyväskylä (1956). Photo © Alvar Aalto Museum / Maija Holma
Finlandia Hall, Helsinki (1971). Photo © Alvar Aalto Museum / Rune Snellman
Studio Alvar Aalto, Helsinki (1955). Photo Rauno Träskelin © Alvar Aalto Museum
Savoy vase/Aalto vase (1936). Photo © Alvar Aalto Museum / Maija Holma
Paimio chair (1931). Photo © Alvar Aalto Museum / Martti Kapanen
Aalto University, Schools of Science Technology, main auditorium, Otaniemi, Espoo (1956). Photo © Alvar Aalto Museum / Martti Kapanen
Paimio Sanatorium. Photo © Alvar Aalto Museum / Maija Holma

  “It is great that the network’s founding document was signed right here in Jyväskylä, which has a multifaceted, representative cross-section of Aalto’s output,” says Mayor of Jyväskylä Timo Koivisto. Any Finnish or foreign city, town or municipality with at least one noteworthy Alvar Aalto site can join the Aalto Cities network. In all, there are about forty Aalto Cities around the world.

Alvar Aalto. Photo Eva and Pertti Ingervo. © Alvar Aalto Museum

The freeform network makes it possible for the participating cities and the Alvar Aalto Foundation to cooperate more closely and in more diverse ways than before, especially on Aalto-related communications, marketing, tourism, exhibitions and event production. The goal is to give Aalto’s profile and brand greater prominence in Finland and abroad.

“The hope is that, in the future, the network will have formed an international body that spans all the Aalto cities,” says Lindh.