Tampere Workers' Hall
Tampere Workers' Hall | |
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Tampereen työväentalo | |
General information | |
Location | Hämeenpuisto 28, Tampere |
Coordinates | 61°29′45″N 023°45′06″E / 61.49583°N 23.75167°ECoordinates: 61°29′45″N 023°45′06″E / 61.49583°N 23.75167°E |
Current tenants | Social Democratic Party of Finland, University of Tampere, Tampere Lenin Museum |
Completed | 1900 |
Landlord | Tampere Workers' Society |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Heikki Tiitola, Heikki Kaartinen, Bertel Strömmer |
Tampere Workers' Hall (also known as the Puistotorni, The Park Tower) is a conference and congress centre in Tampere, Finland. It was built in 1900 by the Tampere Workers' Society as a People's House for the local working-class. The building has been expanded twice, in 1912 after the design of the architect Heikki Kaartinen and in 1930 by the achitect Bertel Strömmer. Today the Workers' Hall include conference rooms, a restaurant as well as premises of the Social Democratic Party, University of Tampere and the Tampere Lenin Museum. The 1901 established Tampere Workers' Theatre was housed in the Workers' Hall until 1985 when the new theatre building was raised to the next plot.[1]
In December 1905 Tampere Workers' Hall hosted the exile conference of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party.[2] It was an unofficial meeting held between the 3rd and 4th Party Congresses in London and Stockholm. Tampere Conference was the first time when Lenin and Stalin met in person.[3]
References
- ↑ "Historia". Puistotorni (in Finnish). Retrieved 11 November 2016.
- ↑ "The Lenin Museum". Museot.fi. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
- ↑ "J. V. Stalin: ″Lenin: A Speech Delivered at a Memorial Meeting of the Kremlin Military School, January 28, 1924″". Marxists.org. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
External links
- Media related to Tampere Workers' Hall at Wikimedia Commons