Kokkola Sights

Sights in Kokkola

  1. Neristan

    This delightful area of wooden houses known as Neristan is what remains of the working class area of Kokkola (Neristan means 'lower town') where the sailors and fishermen lived. Until relatively recently, the river was wide and navigable up to here, and fishing boats docked to unload their finny cargo and sell it in the kauppatori.

    It's a pleasure to wander around these streets (one of the most picturesque is Läntinen kirkkokatu), which have a range of antique shops as well as a couple of cafés and restaurants. The tourist office publishes a good walking tour of town.

    reviewed

  2. Taidemuseo

    The Taidemuseo is in a large 19th-century merchants' mansion. It contains the collection of the portly Karl Herman Renlund (1850-1908), a shopworker who made good and left his art collection for the benefit of 'students and the working class'. He tipped the scales at 160kg when he died, but his collection is less heavyweight, although a Victor Westerholm canvas depicting the savage beauty of the Voikkaa rapids is memorable.

    reviewed

  3. Mineraalikokoelma

    The Mineraalikokoelma will surprise with an amazing assembly of natural beauty. Resident geologists have been known to give emphatic tours through the exhibits, which include stunning but fragile crystals and meteorite fragments. In the same building, the Luontomuseo (natural history collection) has a collection of stuffed mammals and birds, plus traps and other hunting devices.

    reviewed

  4. Halkokari

    Beyond Neristan, the Suntti stream continues down to the harbour. There is a beach here, Halkokari, where a British attack was repelled during the Crimean war. One of the gunboats was captured, and can be seen in the 'English Park' on the river just north of Neristan. The event is commemorated in the town's festival in early June, when people dress-up 1854-style, and there's a theatrical re-enactment.

    reviewed

  5. Tankar Island

    This lighthouse island once offered safe passage through the tangled waters surrounding it but has become a popular day trip (adult/child €17/7) for nature walks and a leisurely lunch at the pierside Café Tankar. Kokko Line departs from the camping ground in summer (4½ hours, noon and 8am June and August, noon and 6pm July).

    reviewed

  6. KH Renlund Museo

    KH Renlund Museo is in a large 19th-century merchant’s mansion. It contains the collection of Karl Herman Renlund, a shopkeeper who left his art collection for the benefit of ‘students and the working class’. The collection is unexceptional, but for a Victor Westerholm canvas depicting a raging torrent of the Voikkaa rapids.

    reviewed

  7. Historiallinen Museo

    The Historiallinen Museo consists of two proud old wooden buildings; the old school dates from 1696, making it one of the oldest secular buildings in situ in the country.

    reviewed

  8. Home of Anna and Fredrik Drake

    The Home of Anna and Fredrik Drake, originally built in the 1830s, is one of the few homes that’s open to the public.

    reviewed

  9. Luontokokoelma Kieppi

    The Luontokokoelma Kieppi is not very compelling, with a collection of stuffed animals, antlers and traps.

    reviewed