
Espoo Cathedral
In Espoo, Finland .
More places to visit in Espoo
Discover more attractions and things to do in Espoo.

Gallen-Kallela Museum
If you want Espoo with a dash of myth and artistry, head to the Gallen-Kallela Museum at Tarvaspaa. The building began as an atelier home for Akseli Gallen-Kallela in 1911-1913 , and its National Romantic silhouette makes it feel more like a personal world than a neutral gallery. The museum has operated on site since 1961 , presenting paintings, sketches, and design work that connect Finnish landscape to national storytelling, without losing the intimacy of a home studio. One of the pleasures is the setting: Tarvaspaa sits close to bays and shoreline paths, so the visit naturally expands into a walk among reeds and birch trees. Inside, rooms are compact and atmospheric, which makes you notice materials, window views, and the way the building frames light. Check the temporary exhibition if you can, then return to the permanent works to see how themes repeat across decades. Arrive with time to linger on the terrace or nearby paths; the art and the surrounding landscape feel like two chapters of the same story.

Haltia The Finnish Nature Centre
There is a moment at Haltia when you realize you can learn about Finnish nature and step into it almost immediately. Opened on 31 May 2013 beside Lake Pitkajarvi , the centre was designed by Rainer Mahlamaki to sit low against the forest edge, with warm timber tones that soften the modern lines. Inside, exhibits explain forests, bogs, and the coastal archipelago through sound, maps, and hands-on stations, so the information lands without feeling like a lecture. The building is roughly 3500 m2 , which gives space for families, school groups, and quieter corners where you can slow down. Haltia also works as a practical base: trail maps, seasonal advice, and a cafe that makes it easy to plan a loop walk. Step outside and you are already on paths that lead toward Nuuksio, making the centre a true gateway to Nuuksio . Visit on a gray day if you can; the interior light feels especially calm, and the view over water turns the landscape into a moving backdrop.

Nuuksio National Park
A quick hop from Helsinki, Nuuksio National Park makes the capital region feel suddenly wild, with pine forests, dark lakes, and smooth bedrock underfoot. Established in 1994 , the park covers about 53 km2 and still feels intimate, because trails weave between ridges and water rather than across open plains. Many visitors are surprised by over 100 lakes , from small ponds to long shorelines that catch low winter light. The area is managed by Metsahallitus , and well-marked routes plus fire-ring shelters make day hikes easy even for first-timers. Late summer brings blueberries and bright mushrooms, while October turns the forest floor into a russet carpet. On the rocks, the view opens suddenly and you can watch clouds slide over the treetops like slow waves. Follow a loop that crosses boardwalks over bogs, then pause at a lakeside lean-to for a thermos break. Public transport can get you close, but the last stretch feels like an intentional step away from the city. Go early on weekdays for quieter trails, and pack layers: the breeze off water can feel sharp even in July.

WeeGee Exhibition Centre
Espoo's best museum day can happen under one roof, and WeeGee Exhibition Centre is the reason. The complex was designed by Aarno Ruusuvuori as a printing house in 1964 , expanded in 1967 , and its concrete geometry still reads as confident Finnish modernism. Today it functions as a shared home for multiple museums, so you can move from contemporary art to local history without crossing town. A key detail is that it is a former printing house , and the industrial scale gives exhibitions breathing room, with wide corridors and high ceilings that make crowds feel smaller. The centre opened to the public in its current cultural role in 2006 , and the vibe is more relaxed than monumental: lockers, cafes, and clear signage encourage spontaneous browsing. Take time to walk the exterior too; the facade lines up with the surrounding parkland and makes the building look almost like a sculpted piece of infrastructure. Come with one must-see museum in mind, then let the rest of the building surprise you.