Vantaa (river)
The Vantaa (Finnish: Vantaanjoki, Swedish: Vanda å) is a 101-kilometre (63 mi) long river in Southern Finland. The river starts from the lake Erkylänjärvi in Hausjärvi and flows into the Gulf of Finland at Vanhankaupunginselkä in Helsinki. One of the tributaries of the Vantaa river is Keravanjoki that flows through the town of Kerava north of Helsinki.
Vantaa | |
---|---|
The Vantaa in June 2008 | |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | Lake Erkylänjärvi |
• location | Hausjärvi |
Mouth | Gulf of Finland |
• location | Vanhankaupunginselkä, Helsinki |
Use as water and power supply
The country's capital, Helsinki, uses water from the Vantaa river as its backup water supply if the Päijänne Water Tunnel needs to be repaired.[1]
The Helsinki-based energy company Helsingin Energia has a working power station museum located at the mouth of Vantaanjoki. The Vanhakaupunki Hydropower Plant produces an average of 500 MWh annually.[2]
Gallery
- Vanhankaupunginkoski rapids
- Ruutinkoski rapids
- A dam in Vantaanjoki
gollark: But... extreme reactors!
gollark: Ah yēs.
gollark: Anyway. What need you steam for?
gollark: Lithium is from WATER?!
gollark: FLiBe is just made from free rocks and lithium, though, via a ridiculously complex process.
References
- "Helsingin Sanomat – Helsinki drinking water to be drawn from the Vantaa from mid-April". Retrieved 2008-11-18.
- "Helsingin Energia – Vanhakaupunki hydropower plant". Archived from the original on May 17, 2012. Retrieved 2008-11-18.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.