JYVäSKYLä




'Jyväskylän kaupunki'
Coat of Arms
Location of Jyväskylä in Finland

CityJyväskylä (1837)
Administrative ProvinceWestern Finland
RegionCentral Finland
Historical ProvinceHäme
Area
 - Total
 - Land
 - Water
Ranked 383rd
136.9 km²
105.9 km²
31 km²
Population
 - Total (2004-12-31)
 - Density
Ranked 9th
83,582
610/km²
Time zoneHelsinki, Riga, Tallinn: UTC+2

Fireworks in Jyväskylä
'Jyväskylä' (IPA: ['jyʋæsˌkylæ]) is a city located in central Finland, 147 km from Tampere and 270 km from Helsinki, near the lakes Päijänne and Keitele. It is the center of the Jyväskylä Region. The site of many education-related firsts in Finland, Jyväskylä is known as a city of schools, the Athens of Finland, and is also famous for its many buildings designed by Alvar Aalto and for hosting Neste Oil Rally Finland, which is part of the World Rally Championship. The city is home of the annual Jyväskylä Arts Festival.
At the end of 2004, Jyväskylä had a population of 83,582, while the Region of Jyväskylä had 163,420 inhabitants. The leaders of Jyväskylä have long proposed that Jyväskylän maalaiskunta (the rural municipality of Jyväskylä), which has its town hall, graveyard and beautiful church Taulumäen kirkko all conveniently located in central Jyväskylä, should unite with the city, but Jyväskylän maalaiskunta has resisted. The Jyväskylä region includes Jyväskylä, Jyväskylän maalaiskunta, Laukaa, Muurame and Toivakka.
As of 2006, the city mayor is Markku Andersson.
According to a wide image survey (done every second year), Jyväskylä is one of the most successful cities in Finland. In 2006 Jyväskylä was number two (after Tampere) as the most desirable city to live in Finland and the city was also believed to be the best growth milieu for children and the cosiest living environment.
The unemployment rate in Jyväskylä is 14.8% (2005).

Contents
Education
History
Transport
People
Twin towns
Friendship cities
Trivia
References
External links

Education


A number of firsts in Finnish education have taken place in Jyväskylä:

★ The first Finnish-speaking Lyceum (High School) (1858)

★ The first Finnish-speaking teacher training college (1863)

★ The first Finnish-speaking school for girls (1864)

★ Finland's first Summer University (1914)
Due to this, among other things, the city earned the nickname ''Athens of Finland''.
The teacher training college later evolved into the College of Education (1934) and further into the multidisciplinary University of Jyväskylä (1966).
The University of Jyväskylä is one of the most popular universities in Finland. Almost 16,000 students are enrolled to study for a Bachelor's or Master's degree, and the university also offers PhD programs in most of its subjects. Historically, the university has excelled in the study of education, but in the last few decades it has also gained respect in the sciences. It is the only university in Finland offering university-level education in sports, training sports teachers and coaches. Its IT program is the largest in the country in terms of attendance. Including school children, and the students in high schools, vocational schools, the university of applied sciences, known also for its IT program, and the university, the number of students and pupils in the city reaches 40,000, boosting Jyväskylä's reputation as a "student city".

History


Jyväskylä was founded on 22 March, 1837 by Czar Nicholas I of Russia and built essentially from scratch. The original town was built between Lake Jyväsjärvi (which is connected to Lake Päijänne) and the Jyväskylä ridge (Harju), and consisted of most of the current grid-style city centre. In the early 20th Century, the town expanded several times. Most of today's Jyväskylä was built after the Continuation war, when refugees from Karelia and other parts of the country moved to the city and housing was badly needed. Today, Jyväskylä is growing by approx. 1,000 inhabitants/year. Interestingly, only about a third of the people living in Jyväskylä were born in Jyväskylä, which makes the city vibrant and culturally ever-changing.

Transport


Jyväskylä railway station is served by VR direct trains to Helsinki, Pieksämäki, Tampere, Turku, Vaasa and many other destinations in Finland. The station was extensively modernised in 2002.
Jyväskylä Airport was expanded in 2004. It has direct flights to Helsinki-Vantaa Airport.

People



Alvar Aalto, Architect.

Matti Nykänen, ski jumper.

Harri Rovanperä, rally driver.

Raimo Summanen, ice hockey player and coach.

Henri Toivonen, rally driver.

Matti Vanhanen, Prime Minister of Finland (2003-).

Laura Voutilainen, popsinger.

Twin towns



Esbjerg, Denmark (1947)

Eskilstuna, Sweden (1947)

Debrecen, Hungary (1970)

Fjarðabyggð, Iceland (1958)

Niiza, Japan (1997)

Potsdam, Germany (1985)

Poznań, Poland (1974)

Stavanger, Norway (1947)

Yaroslavl, Russia (1966) [1]
Friendship cities


Jalapa, Nicaragua (1988)

Mudanjiang, China (1988) 1

Trivia



★ The asteroid 1500 Jyväskylä was named after the town by its Finnish discoverer, Yrjö Väisälä.

References


1. Twin cities

External links



City of Jyväskylä - Official International version of the site

Jyväskylä Forum - forum in English for foreigners in Jyväskylä

Jyväskylä Human technology city - magazine

Map of Jyväskylä

Finland Travel Community - Forum, News, Pictures, Video, Chat, Networking & more! (in English)

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves