Fabianinkatu 17

Fabianinkatu 17 is a national romantic-art nouveau building in central Helsinki. Built in 1900–1901 to a design by the architectural firm of Gesellius, Lindgren and Saarinen, it was originally a block of flats, but became increasingly used for offices and was for many years known as the Doctors' House (Finnish: Lääkäreiden talo). In 1953 Agronomiliitto, the Finnish Association of Agronomists, bought it, and it is now called Agronomitalo (Agronomy House).

Façade facing Fabianinkatu (Kasarmitori)
Corner of Fabianinkatu and Pohjoinen Makasiinikatu
Courtyard with staircase windows; chimney serves a bakery

Building

The building is at the corner of Fabianinkatu and Pohjoinen Makasiinikatu; at this point Fabianinkatu forms the east side of Kasarmitori (Barracks Square). In 1898 the brothers Axel, Georg and Ernst Ehrnrooth bought the site, which was then occupied like much of the area by a row of two-storey wooden buildings. Georg and Ernst Ehrnrooth subsequently sold their shares to two physicians, Axel Holmberg and Wilhelm Zilliacus. The building was then commissioned from Gesellius, Lindgren and Saarinen by a housing association and built in 1900–1901.

It was one of the first blocks of flats in the area, and its national romantic-art nouveau style pioneered indigenous Finnish residential architecture and influenced later buildings by Grahn, Hedman & Wasastjerna and Toril and Nyberg.[1][2][3][4][5] It rises five storeys, clad in rough yellow plaster.[6] There is no cornice, but the main façade, facing the square, is interrupted asymmetrically by oriel windows of various shapes and a long balcony. [4][7] The main façade and the corner, which is formed by geometric shapes, are ornamented with grotesques moulded in smooth plaster.[2] The façade facing Pohjoinen Makasiinikatu is rhythmically pierced by bay windows.[8] The roof is steeply pitched and again asymmetrical, with gables of varying heights;[4] the architects' original reddish tiles[7] have been replaced with copper.[2]

The building was also unconventional in its interior layout.[9] On each upper floor were two large apartments, 150–300 square metres (1,600–3,200 sq ft), which ran from the square to the courtyard and included professional space; doctors in particular were envisaged as residents.[3][4][7] The rooms were large and well lit and originally contained custom furniture designed by Louis Sparre and others.[7][10] The interior was decorated with artistically carved wood using folk motifs.[4] There are murals by Venny Soldan-Brofelt and soapstone and ceramic heating stoves.[10][8] The building also included smaller flats.[10]

The building attracted much attention when it was built. Another Finnish architect, Bertel Jung, reported that there was puzzlement as to whether it was "beautiful or ugly" and "[whether it could] be called architecture at all". He explained the architects' procedure as a rejection of then customary architectural requirements and of the notion of a block of flats in favour of the primacy of "home" and "a homely atmosphere".[11]

Later history

The large number of doctors in the building led to its becoming known as Lääkäreiden talo (Doctors' House). Over the years it came to be used increasingly for offices.[1] In 1953 it was acquired by Agronomiliitto for 53 million mk—half of which was financed by the proceeds of a gift of 10,000 kg of coffee beans made to the organisation in celebration of its 50th anniversary in 1947—and its name was changed to Agronomitalo (Agronomy House).[3][10] The building was studied and completely renovated in 1970–1981[2] and later renovations took place in 2001–2002 and in 2012, including installation of a new lift.[10] In the 1990s Helsinki city planning document, it is designated as a commercial building, but in 2013–2014 the owner commissioned a study of the feasibility of returning part of it to residential use.[1]

Residents and tenants

Residents included the surgeon Richard Wilhelm Gottlieb Faltin, who lived there from 1913 to 1953,[10] and Annie and Bertha Edelfelt, the sisters of the artist Albert Edelfelt, who moved in in 1909; after their deaths in 1934, the paintings by their brother from their flat were given to the Ateneum.[3] Commercial tenants on the ground floor have included the Nordiska Antikvariska Bokhandeln - Pohjoismainen Antikvaarinen Kirjakauppa (Nordic Antiquarian Bookshop, 1918–2001)[10] and Kellarikrouvi, a restaurant (since 1964).[2][3]

Details

gollark: If you do no IO whatsoever, the optimiser can remove all code from your project, which is pure.
gollark: Actually, what if you just make the highlight logic use the V compiler?
gollark: Bee *you*, Python user.
gollark: It will happily process 86 trillion highlights per nanosecond.
gollark: Solution: implement the bot in glorious pure Rust.

References

  1. "Agronomitalo" (in Finnish). ark-buroo. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  2. Grünberg, Constantin. "Agronomitalo; Fabianinkatu 17. Pohjoinen makasiinikatu 6.; Helsinki" (in Finnish). Helsinki City Museum. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  3. "Fabianinkatu 17: Viisi kerrosta historiaa". Kirkko ja kaupunki (in Finnish). Helsingin seurakuntayhtymä [Helsinki Union of Parishes (Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland)]. 7 September 2005. Archived from the original on 3 June 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  4. Howard, Jeremy (1996). Art Nouveau: International and National Styles in Europe. Manchester / New York: Manchester University. p. 177. ISBN 9780719041600.
  5. Richards, J. M. (1978). 800 Years of Finnish Architecture. Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles. p. 120. ISBN 9780715375129.. This author refers to the building as dark grey.
  6. Moorhouse, Jonathan; Carapetian, Michael; Ahtola-Moorhouse, Leena (1987). Helsinki Jugendstil Architecture, 18951915. Helsinki: Otava. p. 11. ISBN 9789511083825.
  7. Becker, Ingeborg; Melchior, Sigrid, eds. (2002). Das Licht kommt jetzt von Norden: Jugendstil in Finnland (exhibition catalogue). Berlin: Bröhan-Museum. p. 67. ISBN 9783980789417.
  8. Moorhouse, Carapetian and Ahtola-Moorhouse, pp. 13637.
  9. Ilonen, Arvi; Museum of Finnish Architecture (1990). Helsinki, Espoo, Kauniainen, Vantaa: An Architectural Guide. Helsinki: Otava. p. 59. ISBN 9789511107620.
  10. "Agronomitalo" (in Finnish). Agronomiliitto ry [Finnish Association of Agronomists]. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  11. Jung, Bertel. "Ett Problem" (in Swedish). Ateneum 1901, p. 456, cited in Moorhouse, Carapetian and Ahtola-Moorhouse, pp. 11, 136.

Further reading

  • Mäkinen, Riitta (2001). Yksi talo, tuhat tarinaa: Agronomitalon historia 1901-2001 (in Finnish). Helsinki: Agronomiliitto. ISBN 9789519630144.

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