This video is so interesting. Not only are we learning about architecture, but Finnish sauna culture, Finnish society, and Finnish personalities. For those of us who have never been to Finland, it is a lesson in geography, lifestyle, and history, as well.
What is interesting, is we kinda saw Finns, learn a bit more about Finnish culture as well. Maybe more accurately, they are re learning about is, with opening up of a public sauna. A usually closed off, stand offish Finnish persona opens up.
For anyone wondering about the empty area behind Löyly, it used to be an industrial area and is now waiting for development. Löyly will be part of a new sea shore park and residental area of Hernesaari.
Definitely worth a visit if you are in town, great ambiance. I had a part of my bachelor party here. We first went to the sauna, had dinner here and then headed for the nightlife in Helsinki.
I was here this past October! Had a wonderful dinner and then swam in the freezing cold water after spending time in the sauna. Amazing experience and amazing architecture.
As a finn I still find it funny that it's just a matter of time that a smoke sauna burns. Not if but when... Explaining that to people is interesting to say the least!
It's probably because of the long heating time and because soot does have a flashpoint. For anyone foreigners afraid about being trapped, smoke sauna isn't lit while used, so if it were to burn, it would be during heating.
Fun fact: The place is owned by a Finnish actor named Jasper Pääkkönen. it wouldn't normally say much to people abroad but if you're familiar with Spike Lees movie Black Klansman, he played Felix Kendricksen.
@@notsharingwithyoutube It is very remarkable how the city built an amazing library in the modern times when most countries are closing their libraries and other public spaces
Wow this video was so peaceful and calming! That building is absolutely gorgeous. Bravo to the design team. It was so fascinating learning about the Finnish love of saunas.
Swedes and Nordic countries in general are a lot like the Japanese in terms of living and building. Their buildings always have a distinct look and are minimalist in design and functional in terms of usage. I love it.
Also somewhat in manners. Japanese have a lot more codes and layers, but Scandinavians (I would say especially Finnish) are also closed, introverted, quiet etc.
Blend in with nature? Löyly is the most well-known URBAN sauna in Finland. In the middle of the BIGGEST city in Finland! There are probably hundreds of urban, public saunas in Finland. That is probably one of the biggest ones. Usually there are multiple smaller ones in a city, in stead of one big one. The countryside / "the nature" has even more saunas, but they are usually private. Or maybe "hiking saunas" in some government nature reserves.
The reason for that is that there is also a smoke sauna and we have a saying in Finland that there are two types of smoke saunas, those that have burned down and those that haven't, yet...
It's embarrassing if I get this wrong, but I think Ville is taking voguing classes in Saiffa. Double embarrassing because I don't talk to him at all 💀💀💀
Do they have any public beaches on Manhattan? If so, then it might be doable. The neighbours would just have to put up with people in towels / bathing suits etc.
@@zachydan😅yeah. Maybe Pier 41 Waterfront Garden area? At least have rocks on the beach there. I have never visited in NY( have dreamed tho long time), i am Finnish, but i just had to do some google maps tours in Red Hook u named..Not bad idea..😅👍🏻👌
Not able to finish this video, but they build this 2016, there has been a public FREE sauna in sompasaari (sompa island) since 2011. It is operated by a society, and anybody can go and heat the sauna up 24/7. That is for the people, this löyly is for people with money. Not saying it's bad, but get off your high horse, architechs acting like made a public service fu.
What is a Nordic sauna? Never seen one and I thought we had em all in Finland... Is a Nordic one of those the Swedes use with max temperature at 60 degrees and clothes on you?
The smoke sauna is preheated. Prior to anyone going in, the door is opened and the smoke is allowed to exit (at this point, nothing is burning anymore). After that the sauna relies on the stored up heat which can last for quite a long time.
Remember this video is about Helsinki and Löyly, it has nothing to do with whole culture about Finland or it is whole Finland. Helsinki is not whole Finland.
Well, not designed but more prone to having it happen. There's a reason that there's a general running joke in Finland about the sauna burning down every weekend.
Maybe you don't know what a smoke sauna means. There is no smoke there. Although the stove does not have a chimney, the smoke is vented before bathing. On the contrary, a smoke sauna is a great experience. The heat is soft and caressing.
@@iv1223 Did i say anything about scandinavia having been mentioned? nordic means nothing. If something is finnish, it doesnt make it nordic, meaning it has nothing to do with scandinavia
How far up one's own .... does one have to be to think this glass, concrete, and steel structure "blends in with nature"? Have you SEEN nature recently?
I understand u completely. As an Finn i can confirm that lot of this, nowadays so popular "Nordic/scandinavian style", that is simple, kinda cold, natural etc etc, in my view overlapping in many ways with Gulags and also Soviet style neighborhoods etc. But i am not expert about latter or design or architechs. It is just my layman opinion..
@@saaraa7876 Yes lets celebrate the Portuguese neighbours, and thank You Sara, I am sure that your generosity has no bounds. I love geography as much as you do!!
The point is that you are cleaner AFTER the sauna. When you sweat all the sweat & dirt out in the sauna, and rinse yourself with water, your skin is very, very clean afterwards. If you have never done 3 rounds of sauna + swimming / shower, you don't even really know what "clean skin" really feels like.
Löyly on huippu mesta arkkitehtoonisesti. Yksi suosikkejani ehdottomasti ja hyvin harvinainen siitä että innoitti itseänikin. Ainoastaan harmi että mukaan piti loppuvaiheessa sotkea taas ilmastouskonto ja muut löpinät. Aivan kuin seuraavaa sukupolvea ei tulisi riippuen Löylyn rakennustavasta tai onko kalalla joku sertti.
Oon erimieltä siksi, että Suomessa otamme nuo asiat usein itsestään selvyytenä. AD on kansainvälinen ja on tärkeä näyttää, että Suomessa näihin panostetaan ja että muuallakin kannattaa :)
Mitä haittaa sinulle on siitä, että yksittäinen rakennus on rakennettu kestävästi ja sertifioidusta puusta? Minusta on hienoa, että Pääkkönen ym. rahoittajat ja suunnittelijat näkevät ympäristön tärkeäksi asiaksi, sillä heillä on keinoja ja pääomaa tehdä asian eteen jotain. Se ei ole sinulta, eikä keneltäkään muultakaan pois.
@@etikkakurkku Hyvä että sait kilpesi kiillotettua näin internetkommentin myötä. Älä unohda lisäksi ruoskia itseäsi iltaisin koska olet etuoikeutettu valkoinen.
@@kristie979 It is actually 23€ per person, you get 2 hours. It is the most expensive sauna in Helsinki. There are also free saunas in Helsinki, but of course they are much, much more "crappier". The city-owned public swimming halls also have multiple saunas (every one has multiple in them), and they cost 5,80€ for an adult -- 3,20 for kids.
Obviously you pay for the experience. If my disability allowed me to travel to the capital and would have the emotional well-being to expose myself, would definitely pay for all that is to be experienced.
This video is so interesting. Not only are we learning about architecture, but Finnish sauna culture, Finnish society, and Finnish personalities. For those of us who have never been to Finland, it is a lesson in geography, lifestyle, and history, as well.
What is interesting, is we kinda saw Finns, learn a bit more about Finnish culture as well. Maybe more accurately, they are re learning about is, with opening up of a public sauna. A usually closed off, stand offish Finnish persona opens up.
completely agree, would love to see similar videos in different countries
And it's not. It is all about Helsinki. Not about Finland.
@@juhaleskinen7383 so? Helsinki is in Finland, Löyly is in Helsinki. Finnish countryside isn’t somehow “more real” Finland than Helsinki.
@@saaraa7876 chillaa veli
For anyone wondering about the empty area behind Löyly, it used to be an industrial area and is now waiting for development. Löyly will be part of a new sea shore park and residental area of Hernesaari.
Hotel so that I can visit 😁🔥👍
Definitely worth a visit if you are in town, great ambiance. I had a part of my bachelor party here. We first went to the sauna, had dinner here and then headed for the nightlife in Helsinki.
I was here this past October! Had a wonderful dinner and then swam in the freezing cold water after spending time in the sauna. Amazing experience and amazing architecture.
As a finn I still find it funny that it's just a matter of time that a smoke sauna burns. Not if but when...
Explaining that to people is interesting to say the least!
I sometimes tell people that one of the criteria for really being Finnish is to have burnt a smoke sauna. Yes, I'm in the club.
It's probably because of the long heating time and because soot does have a flashpoint.
For anyone foreigners afraid about being trapped, smoke sauna isn't lit while used, so if it were to burn, it would be during heating.
Fun fact:
The place is owned by a Finnish actor named Jasper Pääkkönen. it wouldn't normally say much to people abroad but if you're familiar with Spike Lees movie Black Klansman, he played Felix Kendricksen.
Can be also seen in the Vikings.
But still his biggest achievements are acting Saku Salin in Salkkarit, not to mention acting Matti Nykänen ;)
I love that you guys adapted your expectations when you realised what a social space you'd created :) What a beautiful building
An ultimate indicator of a high quality of life is having a Nordic sauna. What a luxury!
Erm...
You can have affordable ones as well.
Here you pay for the experiences.
No. Even our junkies who don't have teeth still have saunas.
I don't know much about Finland, but it looks like they have a very tasteful aesthetic.
@@Sortedbard0 I just looked at a lot of photos of it. Thanks, fren. It is an amazing building.
@@notsharingwithyoutube It is very remarkable how the city built an amazing library in the modern times when most countries are closing their libraries and other public spaces
I love it. Helsinki is my favourite city I have ever visited
Wow this video was so peaceful and calming! That building is absolutely gorgeous. Bravo to the design team. It was so fascinating learning about the Finnish love of saunas.
You should visit.
Twice.
Winter and summer😊
@@suzawilo that would be a dream!
Swedes and Nordic countries in general are a lot like the Japanese in terms of living and building. Their buildings always have a distinct look and are minimalist in design and functional in terms of usage. I love it.
Yah I'm seeing some resemblance
Cultural cross overs, very similar in many ways
Also somewhat in manners. Japanese have a lot more codes and layers, but Scandinavians (I would say especially Finnish) are also closed, introverted, quiet etc.
This is Finnish, it has nothing to do with those Scandinavian monkey devils!
@@Ksoism Finland isn't a part of Scandinavia, though.
I love the cold water bucket for those who don’t want to do the plunge or wants to get the first shock out of the way
What a lovely space you guys have created. Very wholesome presentation too. Would love to visit
Make sure u use the bucket, its such a refreshing experience
This is beautiful, I want to visit Finland just to experience this sauna..
Adding this to the bucket list
WOW! Wow, wow! Absolutely amazing!
I've found a strong interest in the artistic architecture that I didn't realize that I had thanks to your videos on your channel. Thank you
It is so natural to us finns!!! Not a big deal!!!😊
love this for Trixie! She deservers the success after everything with Klarna
Шедевр, дорогие мои финны! Как всегда всё продумано до мелочей. Kippis!
Another place to put on my list to visit.
This is great , it looks seemless with the look of the shoreline
Probably my favourite place in the world
I love the respect and balance between designers!
💚 A truly beautiful building with stunning design... Love the concept of misdirection forcing users to ask for direction 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
One of my favorite places to visit. Kiitos
Ole hyvä 😁😁
I really loved it! I would like to see this place one day
Suupeer relaxinng
Finlind is on my bucket list
jes Suomi on nyt AD'ssa 💪
Eli ei torille, vaan saunaan😊
Amazing ideas and scenic views
Fantastic... absolutely fantastic!
I will one day visit this place. So beautiful and thoughtfully curated.
Мои комплименты!!! Очень крутой проект! Финны молодцы! С легким и красивым паром! Петербург смотрит !
I love how they say sauna
The original way 👨✈️
What a beautiful sauna space!
absolutely stunning architecture
Amazing. Visiting for sure!
Natural și simplu.
A-M-A-Z-I-N-G
Inspiring video, amazing project 😍🤩!!!!!
This was an amazing watch.
Beautiful!!
Awesome!!!
You are now on my bucket list 🔥🥰🥶🤣😂
Brilliant!
My favorite place in Eiranranta ❤️
Very similar aesthetic to Sky Lagoon in Reykjavík, Iceland.
So true! I’ve been to Sky Lagoon so now this is on my bucket list!
@@MikeGajda Welcome to Finland 🇫🇮 ❤
Bravo!!
Hmm very useful and memorable
There's no such thing as a "Nordic sauna"! Only Finnish sauna!
Suomi 😍😍😍
I had the worlds best burger at this place!
And now is the time on Sprockets where we dance!
Blend in with nature? Löyly is the most well-known URBAN sauna in Finland. In the middle of the BIGGEST city in Finland!
There are probably hundreds of urban, public saunas in Finland. That is probably one of the biggest ones. Usually there are multiple smaller ones in a city, in stead of one big one.
The countryside / "the nature" has even more saunas, but they are usually private. Or maybe "hiking saunas" in some government nature reserves.
okay today on beyond the press channel we are blowing up an entire sauna
Yes, Scandinavia not only gets it, but lives it: Quality over quantity
Sure, except for the lawless no-go spaces in some large cities.
Built to burn. That's wild.
The reason for that is that there is also a smoke sauna and we have a saying in Finland that there are two types of smoke saunas, those that have burned down and those that haven't, yet...
@@mantelikukkapenkki2368 It's very cool. I hope I get to try it one day.
❤❤❤❤
It's embarrassing if I get this wrong, but I think Ville is taking voguing classes in Saiffa. Double embarrassing because I don't talk to him at all 💀💀💀
❤❤
Not bad at all
please build this in NYC
As this is a public building, I fear it would be largely taken advantage of and destroyed in the city
Hah, probably prohibited due to it being a bathing location, or due to some BS public indecency regulation. Can't show too much skin while bathing.
Do they have any public beaches on Manhattan? If so, then it might be doable.
The neighbours would just have to put up with people in towels / bathing suits etc.
@@aeyuio2315 Red Hook in Brooklyn is perfectly suitable for this
@@zachydan😅yeah. Maybe Pier 41 Waterfront Garden area? At least have rocks on the beach there. I have never visited in NY( have dreamed tho long time), i am Finnish, but i just had to do some google maps tours in Red Hook u named..Not bad idea..😅👍🏻👌
Not able to finish this video, but they build this 2016, there has been a public FREE sauna in sompasaari (sompa island) since 2011. It is operated by a society, and anybody can go and heat the sauna up 24/7. That is for the people, this löyly is for people with money. Not saying it's bad, but get off your high horse, architechs acting like made a public service fu.
Americans will be: where's the parking lot 🤔??
Tour by sprockets?
Can we get something about BIG
I have to make a correction, most city people I know go to sauna only once a week.
What is a Nordic sauna? Never seen one and I thought we had em all in Finland... Is a Nordic one of those the Swedes use with max temperature at 60 degrees and clothes on you?
Nah, it's mostly Finnish influenced saunas up here. Turkish saunas and vapor saunas are not that common
no infered sauna???
0:30 Benedict Cumberbatch alter
Is this in espo?
He literally said Helsinki at the start of the video
why are there these random non skippable commercials begging us for money?
First
Does anyone understand how a smoke sauna does not poison the inhabitants with carbon monoxide and/or smoke inhalation?
The smoke sauna is preheated. Prior to anyone going in, the door is opened and the smoke is allowed to exit (at this point, nothing is burning anymore). After that the sauna relies on the stored up heat which can last for quite a long time.
TORILLE
Remember this video is about Helsinki and Löyly, it has nothing to do with whole culture about Finland or it is whole Finland. Helsinki is not whole Finland.
Sauna designed to burn down? 😂😂
Well, not designed but more prone to having it happen. There's a reason that there's a general running joke in Finland about the sauna burning down every weekend.
@@CorporalCookie Höpöhöpö
The building is amazing.. the design is... But the smoke sauna sounds like really bad idea for people's health..
Maybe you don't know what a smoke sauna means. There is no smoke there. Although the stove does not have a chimney, the smoke is vented before bathing. On the contrary, a smoke sauna is a great experience. The heat is soft and caressing.
"nordic" there's nothing nordic about sauna. sauna is a finnish an baltic cultural element. it has nothing to do with scandinavian countries
Finland is a nordic country and nothing was said about scandinavian countries.
@@iv1223 Did i say anything about scandinavia having been mentioned? nordic means nothing. If something is finnish, it doesnt make it nordic, meaning it has nothing to do with scandinavia
Sauna is also very popular in northern parts of sweden and norway
How far up one's own .... does one have to be to think this glass, concrete, and steel structure "blends in with nature"? Have you SEEN nature recently?
It makes sense to me, Finnish nature is very rocky and covered in snow most of the year and it looks just like a large rock structure
Меня дизайн напугал. Напоминает ГУЛАГ.. Очень жуткий и мрачный, чем дизайнеры вдохновлялись?
I understand u completely. As an Finn i can confirm that lot of this, nowadays so popular "Nordic/scandinavian style", that is simple, kinda cold, natural etc etc, in my view overlapping in many ways with Gulags and also Soviet style neighborhoods etc. But i am not expert about latter or design or architechs. It is just my layman opinion..
That sauna is perfect so close to de Mediterranean Sea. Gotta love Portugal.
It's in Finland, so that's the Baltic Sea
@@mooonrudi and Portugal isn’t by the Mediterranean either
I though that Portugal was in the Mediterranean Sea not in the Baltic Sea, my bad.
@@GeorgeVenturi there are other seas. But I will welcome out Portuguese neighbours on the Baltic.
@@saaraa7876 Yes lets celebrate the Portuguese neighbours, and thank You Sara, I am sure that your generosity has no bounds. I love geography as much as you do!!
Designed to blend in with a frozen wasteland.
would advice you to research how beautiful the archipelago actually is.
I do not understand the appeal of saunas at ALL. I can't stand being hot and sweaty, it's baffling so many people willingly do this all the time.
It's healthy
That's like saying I don't know why people like running. You get all Hot, sweaty and sore. Baffling
@@alejammi, exactly, who runs on purpose?
The point is that you are cleaner AFTER the sauna. When you sweat all the sweat & dirt out in the sauna, and rinse yourself with water, your skin is very, very clean afterwards.
If you have never done 3 rounds of sauna + swimming / shower, you don't even really know what "clean skin" really feels like.
@@aeyuio2315, that sounds miserable. I'm going to stick with soap.
Löyly on huippu mesta arkkitehtoonisesti. Yksi suosikkejani ehdottomasti ja hyvin harvinainen siitä että innoitti itseänikin. Ainoastaan harmi että mukaan piti loppuvaiheessa sotkea taas ilmastouskonto ja muut löpinät. Aivan kuin seuraavaa sukupolvea ei tulisi riippuen Löylyn rakennustavasta tai onko kalalla joku sertti.
Oon erimieltä siksi, että Suomessa otamme nuo asiat usein itsestään selvyytenä. AD on kansainvälinen ja on tärkeä näyttää, että Suomessa näihin panostetaan ja että muuallakin kannattaa :)
@@kristaheikkala2089 mitäköhän muuten UA-cam on kämmännyt että kaikkien käyttäjänimet on hävinneet ja nykyään numerosarjat perässä. :D
Mitä haittaa sinulle on siitä, että yksittäinen rakennus on rakennettu kestävästi ja sertifioidusta puusta? Minusta on hienoa, että Pääkkönen ym. rahoittajat ja suunnittelijat näkevät ympäristön tärkeäksi asiaksi, sillä heillä on keinoja ja pääomaa tehdä asian eteen jotain. Se ei ole sinulta, eikä keneltäkään muultakaan pois.
@@etikkakurkku Hyvä että sait kilpesi kiillotettua näin internetkommentin myötä. Älä unohda lisäksi ruoskia itseäsi iltaisin koska olet etuoikeutettu valkoinen.
These two couldn't get anymore Finnish.
Almost $500 for two hours!? Are you out of your mind!? Edit: These prices are for private group sauna of up to ten people.
Twice a week for the whole family 😅 yeah no worries
Wrong. More like $25.
not close to being that expensive, but it's definitely pricier than any of the standard public saunas in helsinki
@@kristie979 It is actually 23€ per person, you get 2 hours.
It is the most expensive sauna in Helsinki. There are also free saunas in Helsinki, but of course they are much, much more "crappier".
The city-owned public swimming halls also have multiple saunas (every one has multiple in them), and they cost 5,80€ for an adult -- 3,20 for kids.
Obviously you pay for the experience.
If my disability allowed me to travel to the capital and would have the emotional well-being to expose myself, would definitely pay for all that is to be experienced.
❤️❤️❤️ best sauna❤️❤️❤️
I’m in love with this project ❤ must visit