Unfamous Places recommends
Finland's favourite city, set on a ridge between two lakes with rapids running through its centre. The red-brick cotton mills have become restaurants and galleries. The saunas are legendary. Almost nobody outside Finland has planned a trip here.
Tampere is consistently voted the city Finns themselves would most like to live in. It has great food, a serious arts scene, extraordinary saunas, two lakes, and a red-brick industrial district that has been brilliantly repurposed. It is also entirely off the radar of most European travellers, who go to Helsinki and stop there.
Fifty public saunas in a city of 250,000 people. Rajaportti, Finland's oldest public sauna still in operation, where three generations of the same family have been stoking the fires since 1906. Kuuma, where you step from the sauna directly into Lake Pyhäjärvi. This is not a tourist attraction — it is how the city actually lives.
The Finlayson cotton mill complex — one of the largest industrial sites in 19th-century Finland — has been converted into a city within a city. Restaurants, a cinema, galleries, a spy museum, a labour museum with its original steam engine. The architecture is magnificent and the conversion has been done with intelligence. Manchester, but Finnish.
Restaurant Kajo, Tampere's first Michelin Guide listing, serves foraged Finnish ingredients in a tasting menu that changes with what the owner picked that morning. Restaurant Apaja sits in a former railway outbuilding. The food scene here has arrived — and prices remain a fraction of what equivalent kitchens charge in Helsinki.
Lakes thaw in April and May. Quiet and fresh, with increasingly long days. Good for city exploration.
Long days, lake swimming, terrace dining, festivals. When Tampere is at its most alive.
Forests turn gold. Quieter than summer. Perfect for saunas, indoor culture, and the restaurant scene.
Frozen lakes, snow, sauna with an ice swim. February is the most Finnish month in the most Finnish city.
VR runs frequent intercity trains from Helsinki Central. One of the most comfortable rail journeys in Finland — book in advance for the best fares. The station is central and directly connected to the tram network.
Hire a car at arrivals, take a bus to Helsinki Central and the train from there, or book Onnibus for a direct coach to Tampere. All three work well.
Direct flights from several European cities including Ryanair routes. Small and efficient. Worth checking as an alternative to Helsinki — often significantly cheaper.
The city centre is compact and walkable. Red trams and blue Nysse buses cover wider areas including Pispala and Hiedanranta. City bikes available in summer.
Tampere's most distinctive district — wooden houses climbing a steep ridge between the two lakes, painted in every faded Nordic colour. Rajaportti Sauna is here. Café Pispala makes the best brunch in the city.
A small paper-mill town home to the Serlachius Museums — two extraordinary art collections in two extraordinary buildings, surrounded by forest and lake. One of the best museum experiences in Finland.
A lakeside town with Finland's oldest castle, the birthplace of Jean Sibelius, and a beautifully preserved 19th-century centre. An easy half-day from Tampere by train.
The northern shore of Lake Näsijärvi — cottage country, birch forests, and Finnish silence. Take the historic Poet's Way steamboat from Tampere harbour in summer.
Finland's oldest city and former capital — medieval castle, a great cathedral, and a restaurant scene that has been leading Finland for a decade. A natural pair with Tampere on a longer trip.
The capital — design, architecture, great food, the islands. Worth combining with Tampere; the train between them is one of the most comfortable in Finland and costs almost nothing booked ahead.