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Stora Enso new HQ designs open for voting

Sustainable cities of the future will be built with wood. In Helsinki, a new sea front landmark is about to take shape based on the Office Building Concept by Stora Enso. This new wooden building will be the Stora Enso head office, showcasing the design opportunities offered by wood products. Six architectural design entries for this sustainable future office have been announced. Source: Timberbiz

The new building, which will house Stora Enso’s new head office, a hotel and public spaces for city residents to enjoy the maritime location, is developed by the Finnish Mutual Pension Insurance Company Varma.

The new office will be a landmark of Stora Enso’s sustainable construction for the future. “Stora Enso has delivered wooden elements to more than 15,000 sites around the world during last years,” Antto Kauhanen, Business Development Manager for Building Solutions said.

“We have seen great examples of what can be done with wooden buildings. However, this new office located at Katajanokanlaituri 4 is not only another building project for us, it is much more. This will be our new head office and the heart of the company,”

Forest, sea and nature are present in several competition entries. The facades of the entries draw on neoclassical lines as well as undulating shapes and wooden lattices that play with light and the seascape.

“Our goal is to develop high-quality office premises in the heart of Helsinki, that coincide with the landscape and the urban surroundings. The competition entries satisfy this goal well,” Ilkka Tomperi, Investment Director, Real Estate Investments at Varma, the project developer and property owner said.

“This is a central location in the heart of Helsinki and there is a lot of expectations,” Anni Sinnemäki, Helsinki Deputy Mayor for Urban Environment said. “With these architectural designs, I am delighted to see that wooden construction is a true solution for construction in a challenging urban environment.”

The aim is to make the building called Katajanokan Laituri (Katajanokka’s Pier) carbon neutral, so it would have a zero-carbon footprint throughout its entire lifecycle. Massive wooden elements used as construction material will cut construction time emissions significantly as well as reduce the use of non-renewable resources.

The competition entries are now public and open for the public to take a closer look and vote for their favourite entry.