Protected building

Nuijamaa Church

Lappeenranta

About this site

Wooden church. Nuijamaa church is the first of the new churches from the post-war reconstruction period. The intimate little wooden church with its numerous decorative details and traditional bell tower represents the nature-close, romantically tinged early phase of architecture following pure functionalism. The church's exterior is characterized by a tall roof with hipped gables, known from Swedish architect Gunnar Asplund's Skogskapellet designed for Skogskyrkogården in Stockholm, which under posts also shelters the entrance and the cobbled terrace in front. The windows have shutters, which like the outer door are equipped with decorative wrought iron fittings. The church's richly articulated design and construction is based on six transverse Cremona arches. Walls and ceiling vault, pews and floor are of brown-stained wood; in the chancel wall and the small altar niche fitted with side windows there is a white plaster rendering. On the rear wall of the altar is the Descent from the Cross sculpture made by sculptor Armas Tirronen. The church hall's almost sole colour accents are the brilliant turquoise of the altar, gallery railings, and pulpit, and the Bible verses painted on one pitch of the ceiling. The ceiling lamps were designed by Paavo Tynell.

Official description (Museovirasto) — machine-translated from Finnish

Nuijamaa Church

Nuijamaa Church is an Evangelical Lutheran church in the Nuijamaa district of Lappeenranta, Finland. The church was opened in December 1948. The national romantic wooden design was created by the architect couple Tarja Salmio-Toiviainen and Esko Toiviainen. The church is located only a couple of hundred meters from the Finnish–Russian border.

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Municipality
Lappeenranta
Heritage Agency record
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