A walk along the Aurajoki river is a nice way to experience some aspects of Turku. The city grew up by the river and the riversides are popular for walking, biking or just enjoying nice weather.
This itinerary describes the river banks from the river mouth to the Turku bypass and somewhat beyond, to the Vanhalinna hill castle in Lieto. It is easy to walk just a section of the itinerary. For going all the way a bike can be useful, unless you want to spend a whole day.
The walk works as an alternative to taking the bus if you arrive in the harbour. In the middle the walk is a way to see locals enjoying this environment. The walk also passes by several attractions. A walk upstream can be a way to get some exercise, or to get a break from city life.
The itinerary is assumed to be used in daytime. For safety, standard street sense should be enough also in the night, but venues other than restaurants and pubs close in the evening, you'd miss the sunshine, and you might not enjoy nightly views that long. There is nice illumination along the river, though, up to Tuomaansilta and a little beyond. The main paths have lights until Halinen, and streets and most roads also farther upstream. For seeing northern lights there is probably too much light pollution even after the Turku bypass (and they are not that common this south), but stars can be enjoyed along the darker sections.
The itinerary starts at the right (north-western) bank near the river mouth and follows either riverside to the Halinen bridge. It then keeps to the northern side, leads through forest and by fields, mostly close to the river, crosses the river near the Turku bypass and leads the last leg by Hämeen Härkätie to the Vanhalinna hill, which was a hill fort in the Iron Age.
The route is described as mostly following the right (north-west) bank of the river from the Port of Turku upstream. You can cross over at any bridge, if you find that side more interesting or want to visit some attraction there.
Downstream the riverside streets are used as cycleways and pedestrian routes and most people are on their way somewhere. By the centre, the riversides are popular for enjoying nice weather, just sitting in good company or taking a beer at the restaurant boats or a coffee at outdoor tables of restaurants and cafés. Upstream people are on a walk with or without a dog, or on a jogging tour. You get out into the countryside. There are some nice picnic spots.
Downstream you will be using the pavement, cycleways, or streets with restricted traffic. Upstream from the cathedral there are also wide paths of well-packed gravel, narrow footpaths (often muddy, never the only option), wide boardwalks, small country roads (often gravel, no pavement), and big roads with separate cycleway shared with pedestrians. These categories are quite uniform (although some gravel paths and gravel roads may have more potholes than others, and stay wet for longer after a rain); you seldom need to worry about a good path deteriorating.
There are restaurants and cafés all the way until the cathedral. Upstream from there they get sparse along the river, except at the campus, where most have short hours. There are three cafés by the main route farther upstream. They are mostly closed off season and may also in season be open only a few hours, only some days of the week: Koroinen (Su 12:00–16:00 year round), Myllärintalo (Tu–Su 10:00–18:00 in season) and Vanhalinna. There are barbecue sites across Vähäjoki from Koroinen and at the canoe quay below Halinen, both with view to rapids; you will need your own firewood. For picnics, there are many nice locations: the riverside or parks downstream; glade-like spots, the grove, and the Vanhalinna hill upstream.
The "Suomen Sydän" route from Åbo Akademi University upstream (crossing at the railway bridge), with posters about cultural history, and the Saint Henry pilgrimage route (Pyhän Henrikin tie) from the cathedral to Köyliönjärvi also follow the river. From Halinen to Komosten kummut there are two more routes, one about the flora, another about prehistory. At Vanhalinna there are a few loops of nature and culture trails. Posters of some of these routes may have text also in English. This itinerary makes no effort to cover the routes, but there is probably information pertaining to them to be found elsewhere.
Names are used a bit sloppily here, e.g. the area by the Halinen rapids is called Halinen, although the name refers to a larger neighbourhood, Ravattula extends to both sides of the river, the highway towards Tavastia is called Hämeentie (instead of alternating between Hämeentie and Hämeen valtatie) and Kurala is used for the village, not all the neighbourhood. The uses are hopefully consistent throughout the itinerary, or at least not too confusing.
The "main" route of this itinerary, along the right bank from the harbour via Koroinen, Halinen, Komosten kummut, Ristimäki and the forest to Vanhalinna and back to Halinen via Virnamäki, is 21 km (13 mi). Add 3 km to get to the cathedral via the Student Village, 500 m more for the market square or the restaurant ships, and finally 3 km to get all the way back to the harbour, for a total of 28 km. Perhaps suitable by bike. Most people would choose either downstream or upstream sections.
By bike to Vanhalinna you might want to return via Vanha Hämeentie, optionally via the lake Littoistenjärvi. The route Turku Cathedral–Tuomaansilta–Koroinen–Halinen–Ristimäki–forest–Vanhalinna and back by Kausela–Kohmo–Kurala–Turku Cathedral is If you go via Littoistenjärvi beach it becomes 11 km + 4.5 km + 8 km = A significant part of the distance is gravel, so you won't keep racing speeds. The return route is on asphalt though. For a quick return, use the cycleway along Hämeentie: 11 km + 8 km =
For a walk to Vanhalinna, you may want to start at the cathedral, cross over to the right bank at Tuomaansilta, and follow the main route as above to Vanhalinna and back to Halinen, then cross over and walk back to the cathedral by or through the Student Village, for a total of Taking the bus from Halinen, it becomes taking the bus when coming back to Hämeentie,
This side of the river, that side of the river
One unofficial division of Turku is täl pual jokke (at this side of the river) and tois pual jokke (at the other side of the river), referring to the parts of the city on different sides of Aura River in Turku dialect – regardless of where you happen to be. "This side" refers to the south-eastern side, with the cathedral and old town hall, whereas the "other side" refers to the market square side, with few inhabitants before the great fire and the new city plan.
Downstream it is easy to choose any section. Terminal–Turku Castle–Forum Marinum–guest harbour–archipelago ferries–Teatterisilta–Auransita–Tuomiokirkonsilta (the bridge by the cathedral) are each roughly (0.3 mi), as is the distance from the right bank to the cathedral and back.
The closure between Tuomaansilta and the railway bridge during the bridge works of 2022–2023 means the right bank between the cathedral and the railway bridge only has dead-end sections. With wheelchair, the downstream sections, the left bank (except a short steeper slope at the old railway bridge) and the route by Raunistula (from the railway crossing near the railway bridge via the mouth of Vähäjoki to the bus stop on Vanha Tampereentie) are still accessible. If you can manage the slopes at Koroinen, you can continue to Halinen instead of Vanha Tampereentie.
Other routes include:
For the legs downstream from Halinen, i.e. by the Student Village, by the centre and downstream, there is no need for preparation or any special equipment. Good walking shoes rather than high heels are useful if you want to walk a longer stretch, but in summer that's all. In cool weather, have clothing for swift walking (if applicable) and for pauses, such as an extra sweater. From Halinen upstream, parts of the route may be muddy in wet times. Going upstream from Halinen you may also want to pack a picnic and something to sit on (there are few benches on those legs). Some drinking water may be nice to have regardless.
In winter good footwear is necessary, as is appropriate overall clothing. Snow is not necessary cleaned but where the route follows streets and roads. Elsewhere there are probably paths through the snow made by walkers, but any stairs and some slopes may be very slippery and upstream from Halinen you might encounter pristine snow. In good winters you might be able to ski along the river most of the way (mind ice safety), and in decent ones there may be skiing tracks upstream from the railway bridge. However, this itinerary does not cover skiing the route.
The itinerary suits also bikers, although you might want to slow down or unmount at some sections, to better enjoy the surroundings and not to disturb pedestrians. The section with boardwalks is for pedestrians only, but you can avoid it or lead your bike. Upstream from Halinen the route can be a little rough at places, but ordinary bikes suffice. Don't choose any of the narrow footpaths even if you have a terrain bike, as you don't want to leave deep tracks.
If you want to take bikes and don't have any, you can rent a bike commercially or from the tourist information, or use the Föli bike sharing bikes. The Föli bikes cost €2 for a one-time hire or €6/month, regardless with an extra fee for hires of more than an hour. A one-time hire for 5 hr thus costs €7, one day €14. With the one-month subscription, this one hire is €2 cheaper, or you could avoid any fees by returning and reborrowing the bike hourly, which should be feasible downstream, not necessarily upstream.
With a wheelchair or pram there are likewise some legs you probably want to avoid. Most of the route upstream from the railway bridge (and part of the boardwalk leg) is well-packed gravel, easy enough with a pram, but possibly somewhat arduous by wheelchair. A few slopes are quite steep. The routes around the worksite by the railway bridge 2022–2023 may not cater to wheelchairs. If you avoid the stairs, keep away from the footpaths and have somebody who can push you up the slopes, there should be no major problems (but the Vanhalinna hill is not accessible). There are steep slopes at a few places, the worst of which are up to the railway bridge at the right bank (steep, tending to develop a step), at the Vähäjoki bridge at Koroinen (ca 20%?), at the suspension bridge upstream from the Turku bypass (long, ca 10%?), all these gravel, and perhaps at Föri (short but quite steep). Other slopes may be arduous, but these might not be doable pushing a wheelchair.
Some routes should be avoided. The first right bank riverside leg after Tuomiokirkonsilta ends with stairs. Access to the riverside walk from Tuomaansilta is by stairs only, except on the downstream side on the left bank (a slight detour to avoid the stairs). For the steep slopes, don't count on managing them without checking. The bridges Martinsilta and Myllysilta require slight detours. There are gentle slopes for the Halinen bridges. Kuralan ponttoonisilta might have steep slopes for the canoe underpass. Teatterisilta, Auransilta, Tuomiokirkonsilta and the bridges at Halinen are unproblematic.
From the harbour to the cathedral the route is nearly level (except an incline at the left bank just before Tuomiokirkonsilta). By the cathedral and from there to Tuomaansilta there are a few one- or two-block sections of sett (Belgian blocks), which may be a little rough. The best route, with only a few gentle inclines, is to follow Piispankatu, turn left at Arken, and continue by the left bank riverside. From the railway bridge onwards the path is well-packed gravel. You can cross over at Halinen by either bridge and get to the Koroinen farm from there (the facilities at the café are non-accessible, but somebody could fetch your serving). The Koroinen peninsula itself has some smooth inclines (but a quite steep slope down to the bridge). Return to Halinen or cross the fields to Saint Mary's church to take the bus back. Upstream from Halinen there are some moderate inclines and declines, which are hard to avoid, some of them quite long (not extensively checked for this itinerary).
To experience the boardwalk on the right bank opposite the cathedral with a wheelchair, you should take a detour by the streets, as the first stretch ends in stairs; go down to the river one block farther, where there is a gentle slope down to the riverside. The route is then on boardwalks and well-packed gravel. Getting to Koroinen from this side involves the slopes of the Vähäjoki bridge. The bridge and part of the peninsula can be seen from the route, and you can continue to a bus stop without crossing.
The itinerary starts in Port of Turku, by the river mouth at the right-hand bank. The Turku harbour railway station 📍 and the adjacent coach station are about 200 m from the passenger terminals, and Turku Castle 300 m farther upstream. From the centre you get there by bus line 1 (stops at and after the castle, and at the terminals). The bus goes along Linnankatu, with just one block between the street and the river, allowing your starting or ending your walk anywhere downstream.
Bus lines 55 and 56 go downstream by Itäinen rantakatu, along the left bank. Lines 14, 15 and 30 join at Martinsilta. The last chance to cross the river downstream is at the ferry Föri 📍, just upstream from the guest harbour.
Many buses pass close to the cathedral (by Uudenmaankatu or Hämeenkatu). Upstream from the centre bus service close to the river is more sparse. The stop numbers given here are for returning towards the centre, the names work both ways.
For the next buses at a stop, use <nowiki>"https://omatpysakit.foli.fi/?stops="</nowiki> followed by the stop number (given above and at the stop sign) as URL. Add "&pagerows=" followed by a number to get more entries. This does not give buses in the opposite direction (the page mentions the destination, but as it isn't the centre, you might not recognise or easily find it).
A new railway bridge is being constructed 2022–2024. The area around the bridge will be partly closed, with directions on alternative routes below (not always up-to-date) and on-site. The alternative routes, and those that have been affected, may be a bit muddy, although they seemed OK in December 2022.
Start by going to the park by Turku Castle 📍. You could pay a visit to the castle, which hosts the historic museum and a restaurant (entrance in both ends). After the castle you cross the railroad with due care and return to the river by Forum Marinum 📍. At the quay there are several museum ships and boats. The cruiseferry Bore, last steamship and first roll-on ship on the Stockholm route, houses a hostel and a restaurant. The yard of the museum has some more maritime items on display. Restaurant also at the museum.
On the left bank the former repair yard has been replaced by new blocks of flats. An old crane has been left as a landmark.
Continue by the river. By the square Varvintori there is a restaurant and the concert hall of the conservatory. The square itself is also an event venue. The very long building by Linnankatu is a former rope factory 📍 – they needed to have a building as long as the ropes they made.
Next is the guest harbour 📍. Restaurant. Just upstream from the guest harbour is the ferry Föri (pedestrians and cyclists only), from 1903. Upstream from Föri is a restaurant ship and ships doing archipelago cruises. By s/s Ukkopekka is the "balance room", now a restaurant. In good winters they have a small ice skating field on the river, with music (and the city prepares a skating route upstream to the cathedral). Walking and skiing on the river is popular also when the ice is a little less strong.
On the left bank are moorings for visiting boats that don't fit at the right bank, and some moorings rented on a yearly basis for big boats. Near the bridge is the quay for the water buses ("line 180") to the islands Pikisaari and Ruissalo. The neighbourhood on the left bank is Martti, with the Modernist Martin's Church.
You'll pass the two bridges Martinsilta and Myllysilta. Myllysilta was built in 1975, but some error was made (the long low design without supports was not easy), and the bridge had to be replaced with the new one of 2011.
There are moorings for the locals on the left bank, and farther up at some more places. Above the street along the shore you can see the park Urheilupuisto, with the Paavo Nurmi Stadium 📍 and the Samppalinna wind mill 📍. By the street are the Wäinö Aaltonen Museum 📍 (with art by the Turku-born namesake, and changing exhibitions of contemporary art) and, close to the pedestrian/cyclist bridge Teatterisilta, the City Theatre 📍 and behind it the Biological Museum 📍, with nice panoramas showing the main biotopes of Finland (with focus on birds and mammals). Across the small street there is the Samppalinna swimming stadium 📍, with picnic space. The row of parks will continue to the cathedral.
When past Teatterisilta (leading to the city theatre) you are in the centre proper. If the weather is nice, there will be a lot of people strolling in the street and sitting at the quay, and kiosks selling ice cream and coffee. This is also the site of the Herring Market and some similar events. The Qwensel House 📍 has a pharmacy museum and a nice museum café in the yard.
Aurakatu at the bridge Aurasilta leads to Kauppatori 📍 (the market square), which is the heart of the commercial district; Kauppatori was re-inaugurated in September 2022, with some construction works still ongoing. The nearby old market hall 📍 is a sight, and the place to shop delicacies. From Aurasilta to the next bridge (by the cathedral) are some of the best restaurants in Turku (about half of the splurge ones).
On the left bank is the museum Aboa Vetus et Ars Nova 📍, with excavations of medieval Turku, contemporary art and a nice café. At the other side of the park is the Handicraft museum 📍, a living history museum in a neighbourhood that survived the fire of 1827. The former observatory 📍 can be seen at the top of the Vartiovuori hill. When the park was founded, the city dwellers carried soil, covering the outcrop hill to enable planting the park vegetation.
At Tuomiokirkkosilta, by the cathedral, you need to take the detour to the traffic lights to get onwards.
As a new railway bridge is being constructed, the walks in the area are in a flux. As of February 2023, the right bank walk is closed between Tuomaansilta and the railway bridge, go via Lonttinen or use the left bank instead. At the left bank there is only a slight detour (with a slope). See below.
On the left bank are Turku Cathedral 📍 and the campuses of Åbo Akademi University (ÅA; Swedophone, closer to the river) and University of Turku (TY, Finnophone, a bit farther up, mostly on the hill). You can either cross Tuomiokirkonpuistikko and walk by the quay or take the street, Piispankatu. There is a steep slope at the end of the quay, so at least those with wheelchair should use the street. Where the quay ends, a footpath continues by the river, but it is steep and narrow; you will probably return up the slope to Piispankatu by the archbishop's residence.
Along Piispankatu there are a number of bourgeois homes, donated to ÅA when founded, newer buildings of ÅA, the Arch Bishop Residence 📍 and residential buildings, most of the latter old wooden houses (a few of them student housing). The Piispankatu association, founded by the residents, was instrumental in saving them. There are some fine examples of Wooden Empire (including the museum Ett hem 📍) and some of 1960's modernist architecture (including the Sibelius Museum 📍, the ÅA main library with Boktornet 📍 and some other buildings of ÅA). The ÅA buildings between the street and the river share a public rose garden.
Where Piispankatu forks, turn left at the next crossroads for getting back to the river – or have your lunch or some pastry at Fabbes at the corner. If you turn left, you can instead have your lunch or coffee at the student café Arken (cross the yard to your right; you'll fit in also as non-student, and the lunch price is a bargain even for outsiders (€8.50 in 2023); tell that you are not staff when paying).
If you chose the left bank, you can cross back to the right bank by the bridge Tuomaansilta or by the railway bridge, or continue by the Student Village. To continue past Tuomaansilta, choose the walk by the river, below the bridge. If you intend to cross over here, you can walk Piispankatu to its end and continue to the bridge from there. There is one more former factory after Tuomaansilta (you can choose to cross its yard if coming by line 220).
Tuomaansilta and the highway to Helsinki, which runs along it, were a perpetual project, first planned in the 1960s, several times put back into the cupboards because of massive protest – people did not like the idea of a motorway leading into the city centre – and popping up in a new incarnation. When it finally was realised in the 1990s, great effort was put into making it attractive.
From mid November 2022, you don't pass under the railway bridge, but cross the former railbed instead. The slope up to there is quite steep. It can be avoided by using the traffic lights on the Helsinki road, as if coming here by bus.
On the right bank, pass through the small park Lönnrotinpuistikko. The quay ends in a wide pedestrian gravel path close to the river. The first leg ends with stairs, so those with bike, pram or wheelchair might want to use the closest roads instead and get to the riverside walk one block upstream.
Across the river you see some of the older buildings of Åbo Akademi, including the palace-like former Humanisticum 📍 and the renovated iron manufactory, now Arken 📍. The big oak Kalmen 📍 at the Sibelius Museum, a popular spot among ÅA students for picnics and summer studies, is a remain from the botanic garden of the Royal Academy, predecessor of University of Helsinki. The garden was founded in 1760 by Pehr Kalm, one of Carl von Linné's students, who was professor at the academy.
After the stairs the riverside walk is still pedestrians only, but you get down to it by a gentle slope. Bikers need to unmount to stay legal, or continue by the roads through Lonttinen, with early 1900s wooden buildings to the left. Here the walkway by the river is a boardwalk, until Tuomaansilta. There are benches and discreet gates down to the shore. You walk under the canopy of the riverside trees. Ducks rest at the shore.
The walkway passes under Tuomaansilta (with the road to Helsinki). There are stairs up to the bridge and the riverside walk continues, although closed during the bridgeworks of 2022–2023. Above the bank is Lonttinen 📍, with quite nice mostly 1990s blocks of flats facing the river. Across the river is a white former factory 📍.
As of October 2022, the right-bank walkway is closed just upstream from Tuomaansilta. Climb the stairs up to the road and walk to the traffic lights a hundred metres away (or take a shortcut to the smaller streets, or cross the bridge to the left bank). Turn right by the lights and follow Lonttistentie like the bikers. Lonttinen is an early 20th century wooden neighbourhood (1990s' houses to the right). The road ends at the former railbed; turn left there for getting around the worksite and continuing along the right bank (or to leave the route for Raunistula). In 2023 there is a temporary pedestrian bridge just after the worksite for crossing the river (the slopes down to and up from the bridge may be challenging by wheelchair). In the autumn of 2023 the new pedestrian bridge should be taken into use, while building the new railway bridge will start sometimes during the year.
(At other times: The riverside walkway ends at the slope down from Lonttistentie and bikers can rejoin, just before your passing under the railway bridge.)
As of October 2022: On the right bank, you turn left by the old railbed and then towards Raunistula 📍 to avoid the worksite. Raunistula is a wooden neighbourhood on a hill, built by workers who got cheaper ground for their houses outside the city border. The neighbourhood was incorporated into the city in 1944, and is now mostly gentrified.
At the Tampere railway crossing (this one is in use) you turn back towards the river, passing between the worksite and the adjacent building, an overnighting facility for homeless people, one compartment for the drunk, one for the sober. Then the route continues as at other times.
The gravel path leads above the bank, with fields and the railway to Tampere on your left and the riverside bushes and trees on your right. A "Suomen Sydän" poster tells about the Barker textile factory 📍, a major employer back then, with 1,000–2,000 workers in the 1920s. The factory is the large older tile building a bit farther.
The Student Village is on the left bank, stretching from the railway to the Halinen bridge, with fields separating it from the river. When university attendance exploded in the 1960s, the student unions founded a foundation to solve the housing problem, resulting in this neighbourhood. Nowadays the foundation has student housing also elsewhere.
From mid November 2022, the railway construction works cause a slight detour also on the left bank route: instead of passing under the old railway bridge, go up the slope to cross the former railbed (this is where you get from the stop of bus line 220 if you pass behind the houses). The gravel path continues upstream from there, joining the former route a bit farther, near the temporary pedestrian bridge.
The walk by the left bank is a mostly level wide gravel path above the river bank. Bushes and trees on the steep slope separate it from the river, which can be seen at the gaps. To the right are mostly fields, separating it from the Student Village. As of 2022, the bridge will soon be replaced to allow double tracks, and a separate bridge will be built for pedestrians and bikers.
The first few (new) buildings facing the river are not for students, but have private "hard money" flats. One of the new student housing buildings is the round tower block Ikituuri 📍. Some of the fields have been made into parks, some are impediment, some have allotment gardens for students and other city-dwellers. There is also a haven, where dogs can play without leash.
On the right bank, after an outdoor gym 📍 (for joggers, free for anybody to use), there is a crossing. To the left there is a path to an unofficial railway crossing (forget about it), forward you get to buses, and to the right a gravel path leads down to a bridge across Vähäjoki ("lesser river"). A hundred metres before the gym there is a path down to the rapids by the Vähäjoki mouth, where there is a campfire/barbecue site with benches (have your own firewood, mind wildfire warnings).
The peninsula between Vähäjoki and Aurajoki is Koroinen 📍, where the bishop seat was from 1229 (year not certain) until 1300, when the current cathedral was inaugurated. The passage to the former bishop's castle is after the uphill slope of the gravel path (taking the short cut directly up the slope spoils part of the experience). A white cross reminds of the history, together with a poster and remaining foundations. This is a popular excursion destination. Outdoor services are held here once or twice yearly by the local congregation.
If you want to return, continue forward at the outdoor gym, to get to an underpass to your left. Coming up on the other side of the railway you'll see bus stops. Cross the road for the left-side one to get to the centre (lines 14 and 15, stop 270). If you skip the underpass and continue 500 m by the railroad along what soon becomes a gravel road, you reach Vanha Tampereentie and the Jokipelto stop. Cross the road for a bus to the centre (lines 14 and 15, stop 270). To the right along the road, across Vähäjoki, are Koroistentie, which leads back to Koroinen (to the farm), and the medieval Saint Mary's church.
Continuing from the peninsula, the adjacent Koroinen farm 📍 buildings are rented to a student community. There is a nice café with mostly vegetarian stuff, a shop with related products, including some historic items, a bike workshop and similar activities (the café is open a few hours in Sundays also in winter). Trees felled in Turku's parks are now taken here to be used for craft and art – and to decay as part of the Elonkehä park, where you can enjoy the afterlife of the trees.
The gravel path leads across more fields, here with growing crop. There are some spots where you can see three medieval churches simultaneously (unique in Finland): Saint Mary's church 📍 across the fields, Saint Catherine's Church 📍 (formerly the parish church of Kaarina) behind the Student Village, and Turku Cathedral downstream.
The next Suomen Sydän poster tells about Kupittaan Savi, a ceramics factory fetching its clay from this side of the river, by a private railway leading across. It also says some words on wildlife, including on the reasonably diverse fish, and displays a European hare and swan mussels.
You then arrive in Halinen, with student and regular housing across the fields, bridges over the river, the Halinen rapids, a weir with fish ladders, canoe rental, canoe portaging facilities, and fishing. By the end of the pedestrian/cyclist bridge is Myllärintalo 📍, with a café (open Tu–Su in season), canoe hiring, fishing info and probably also fishing permits (ask for advice: the area, species, sizes etc. are regulated). There is an exhibition upstairs. On the other side of the river is the former water intake and water treatment plant of Turku. The rapids had several mills in the days of yore.
From the rapids, you follow an asphalt road at the right bank a few hundred metres. When it turns, you take the gravel road through an old farm yard (the right hand one, not the one with an entry forbidden sign). There may be horses in the field. This is in fact a village 📍 with three former farms. Posters tell about some of the historic buildings, including 19th-century granaries (the oldest ones are on the hill of the "entry forbidden" house). The road becomes a pedestrians/cyclists only wide gravel path and leads left up the hill and into the woods.
After the highest point turn right. Straight ahead would be a route through the forest across Virnamäki, which is the suggested return path (see Ravattula to Halinen). Just after the turn there is a poster about Iron Age traces, in the form of small hollows in stones, used for offerings (probably mostly seed). The area has been populated since long time, and such traces of former population can be found anywhere where modern agriculture hasn't destroyed them.
A hundred metres farther, after the slope, there is a narrow footpath to your right leading by a pasture and along the river, with some more posters about the flora of traditional pastures and of the riverside. The paths join by the grove farther ahead.
The gravel path continues over the field to a small hill with a fir grove, Komosten kummut 📍. This is a popular picnic spot. Traces from old times have been found, but it has not been thoroughly excavated and whether there are graves here or something else is not known.
After the grove, you can choose to return by the gravel path leading away from the river or continue by the river. To return, turn left and then left again by a muddy path over a narrow field to return through the forest of Virnamäki, or continue past that path and turn when hitting a road to return by proper roads. See Ravattula to Halinen below.
As you continue, the footpath and gravel path join and you get out of the wood. Soon, a new footpath forks away towards the river. Follow it if you have good footwear. It is as narrow, rough and muddy at places as the other suggested footpaths, but it has an ambience of its own. In winter it may be well travelled and reasonably easy.
If you have a bike or pram, you will want to continue by the gravel path past the lone bench, along the edge of the wood and away from the river. When another gravel path leads to the right, back to the river, turn to there. At another Suomen Sydän poster the riverside footpath joins. The poster tells about Ristimäki across the river, with rich Iron Age findings, not to be confused with its namesake forward along the route.
The path leads by large fields, and soon you again have a chance to cross the river. Here was a manually operated ferry ("Kampiföri") for some years, but it got into disrepair all too often and now there is a pontoon bridge, with an opening high enough for canoeists (which makes it quite steep for those crossing). If you cross, you will get to Hämeentie and, on the other side of it (use the underpass on your left unless you want to return), the living history museum of Kuralan kylämäki 📍. For getting back to the centre, there is a stop on Hämeentie, 250 m to the right (stop 1642, "Jaanintie"). From the museum the one on Jaanintie (stop 1658, "Kylämäki") is closer. Line 6 at the former and lines 2–2C on the latter both run reasonably often.
From the bridge, a narrow possibly muddy footpath leads straight to the next bridge, for the Turku bypass. This can be used one way to avoid returning by the same route, but it is less varying and not much shorter than the alternatives.
The gravel path turns straight away from the river. At the crossroads at the forest edge, turn to the right to continue, left to return to Halinen (see Ravattula to Halinen). This is a gravel road (Vanha Ravattulantie) with the odd car. Straight ahead is a skiing route in winter.
Turning right you are in Ravattula, in Kaarina. In the fields there are a few wooded hills. Turn right at the barn and cross the field by a gravel road to get to Ristimäki 📍, where remains of the oldest known church in Finland were found in 2013: a wooden one built in the late 1100s and used into the 1200s, when the diocese got more organised. As of 2021 the contour of the little church has been marked with stones and there is a poster, a post box with a guest book and folders, and a picnic table. Ristimäki means "cross hill", a hint about the former church site. Get back to the barn to continue.
At the next crossroads, with the yard of a farm straight forward, turn left for a nice detour through the forests, or right for a shortcut via the Turku bypass-Hämeentie crossroads.
Turning right, the road will turn left and pass by the farm buildings. Turn right again and get down to the bridge of the Turku bypass. The signage is misleading as of February 2023 (pointing at a non-existing route), but cross Hämeentie highway and do a P-turn to get under the bridges towards Lieto. Get up the hill along the highway and through an underpass to the Vanhalinna museum road, part of Hämeen Härkätie.
For the forest, turn left, then right, to get to a bridge over the Turku bypass. On the other side, turn right, follow the edge of the forest and turn left into it. Nice forest walk. After a warning sign ("Varo hevosia") you cross a harness racing training loop (look out, they are fast) by a field, and again later. When you have crossed the loop twice you can see the Vanhalinna hill outcrop across the fields. You now have a 500 m downhill stretch along a gravel road down to the river.
The wooden pedestrian suspension bridge is a sight in itself. Downstream you have the Turku bypass, upstream you can see the Vanhalinna hill. You have to continue a bit forward to get to the museum road leading to the left towards the hill fort. To get to Turku by foot or bike, use the tunnel under Hämeentie. If you chose the shortcut, you'll come from there.
You pass the border from Kaarina to Lieto and a nature and culture trail begins, first following the road. You reach fields again and get to see Vanhalinna for the third time. A fork of the trail leads by the forest edge to the river and continues along it to Vanhalinna. By the road you pass by Kuninkaanlähde, a well where it is said the King once stopped to drink.
When you reach the Vanhalinna 📍 hill you can choose to just climb it (use the trail) and have your picnic, or to also visit the museum if it is open. By the hill there is the Vanhalinna mansion, owned by the University of Turku. In summer there are amateur theatre performances by the barn. The nature and culture trails lead in a few directions, mostly forming loops of 2–2.5 km.
Have your picnic at the hilltop, enjoy the rural landscapes, and imagine the view a thousand year ago, when this could be a refuge if pirates arrived from the sea. The fields were smaller, the dwellings and other buildings were different, there were no roads, but much of the landscape was similar.
Turning back, you follow the museum road back to Hämeentie. You could start by the footpath by the foot of the Vanhalinna hill, continuing along the river and rejoining at the end of the fields.
At Hämeentie you can turn back to the suspension bridge and return through the forest the way you probably came, take the bus to Turku (line 6 runs every half an hour or so, there is an electronic display showing the next bus; stop 5004), or use the underpass for the Turku bypass crossroads.
The routes east of the river from here mostly suit bikers, as they are quite long and far from the river, although also walkers may want to end their journey at the Littoinen beach. If you are walking and want to return through or by the Student Village, the nicest option is probably to return to Halinen by the right hand (western) bank and cross over there.
Bikers who just want to get home after Vanhalinna might want to cycle straight by Hämeentie (which transforms into the street Hämeenkatu after the railway). There are mostly cycleways on both sides, but the regional biking route 9 from Lieto to Turku is well signposted and is probably the fastest option. It runs by the left-hand (south-east) side of the highway until after Halinen, where it turns up to Vanha Hämeentie for half a kilometre.
If you follow the bypass to the left (east; before or after the crossing), you come to a bridge over the bypass. From there the road leads southward by the residential areas of Auranlaakso and Kausela (mostly single-family houses from the last 50 years). There is signage for Littoistenjärvi. Continuing along Littoistenjärventie, you reach the Järvelä 📍 bird wetland and then the lake Littoistenjärvi 📍, with a dance pavilion (dances Thursdays in summer) and a beach (shallow, i.e. warm and child friendly, but prone to problems with algal bloom and similar). Lines 2B and 2C take you from Littoinen to Turku (stop 6374 or 6372). You could also continue via Kohmo to Kurala (most bikers should). If you want to skip Järvelä and Littoinen, turn right from Littoistenjärventie to Auranlaakson koulutie, continue through the T-crossing (the cycleway continues) and turn right at Kohmontie through Kohmo and through the underpass under Jaanintie near Kurala.
From Kurala, bikers might want to go for Kuralantie, starting in front of the main entrance and transforming into Vanha Hämeentie, the pre-automobiles highway from Tavastia, and cycle through Nummi. The cycleway is narrow, watch out at crossroads. Like Raunistula this is a former worker's neighbourhood with wooden houses, now incorporated into Turku (Nummi used to belong to Kaarina) and partly gentrified.
The pontoon bridge is 500 m from Kuralan kylämäki (slightly upstream). If you cross over, see below.
If you turn right (west) at the Hämeentie-Turku bypass crossroads you get to the bypass bridge over the river. You can take the footpath down to the river immediately after having crossed it. When you reach trees lining the riverside, take a look back, for the last view of the Vanhalinna hill. The footpath leads between fields and the river. On the left bank you see summer cottages or homes posing as such. After a long walk (1.3 km), you reach the pontoon bridge.
You could also follow the Turku bypass a little farther up the hill and turn left to Vanha Ravattulantie for the route by Ristimäki, joining those that chose the forest route.
If you go back through the forest and cross the bridge over the Turku bypass, continue straight, turn left and then right, to get to the barn by Ristimäki. Continue along the road (Vanha Ravattulantie) across the field and along the forest edge to the crossroads above the pontoon bridge. Turn to the bridge or continue forward.
At the pontoon bridge you can cross the river for Kuralan kylämäki and bus stops, follow the riverside until the pine grove (along the route described in the opposite direction above), or cross the fields up to Vanha Ravattulantie and turn left to follow it along the forest edge.
If you chose the riverside, you can join the route described below by turning right at the other end of the fields or at the grove.
The road by the forest edge after Ristimäki (Vanha Ravattulantie) leads by the forest edge above the pontoon bridge and continues through the forest. There are some homes, some of them former farms. You get out to the forest edge again, and there is a gravel path down to the river, forking for the pine grove and the pontoon bridge (those with prams passed the fork after visiting the grove).
The road changes names to Ravattulanpolku. Soon after, there is another gravel path to the left, leading more or less forward. For Virnamäki, take it. The path passes by some backyards and turns left (with a path continuing forward to the three-farm village and another to the right, to the road).
When the view opens to the fields above the grove, there is a muddy path to the right. Where it leads into the wood you might see a poster for "Virnamäen muinainen kalmisto", the Iron Age findings in the Virnamäki 📍 wood you'll pass through. Little can be seen by untrained eyes, but there is plenty for the archaeologists, including burial mounds. The path is drier in the wood, but still rough for bikers, although plenty of them do not mind. You will end up at the junction by the stones with offering hollows and continue through the three-farm village.
If you really do not like the look of the path, you can instead continue to the grove and turn right along the river, the route you probably followed upstream, or get back to the road.
Skipping the Virnamäki section, Ravattulanpolku has transformed into Komostenkatu, then transforms into Frantsinkatu. At the latter name change you should turn left to Kalloistenkatu, to get to the Halinen rapids. If you miss the junction, Frantsinkatu turns right (you'll end up by the supermarket), but Kuohukuja forks off to the left, leads by the Haliskylä student housing, transforms into the minor Pyörrepolku, and leads as cycleway by the road to the rapids. This route leads on asphalt through residential areas. The routes through the forest and along the river are probably more pleasant for most pedestrians, but bikers might prefer the roads.
When you reach the Halinen rapids, you can take the bus or walk back, perhaps along the left bank, by or through the student village.
From Halinen downstream, there is a wide gravel path by the river, between the vegetation on the slope and the fields by the Student Village. Here are joggers and walkers, with or without dog, and some bikers. After a bend of the river there is a haven, where dogs can play without being on a leash. After the haven, there is a small park of sorts, with many oaks (an anniversary gift to Turku from municipalities of Finland Proper). By the end of the park there is a fork. Continue along the river or take the left path.
The left path continues as the street Inspehtorinkatu, after having passed a playground. To avoid the street you can either opt for a cemetery walk (see below) or turn right just after the playground, pass the end of one house and the side of another and turn left for a walkway (bikes allowed) between the student housing blocks (you can pass through their yards, but you'll soon feel like being in a labyrinth). You might have mixed feelings (or a surrealistic one) about the buildings and yards, uniform in general appearance but none like the next one, with unpainted rough concrete and coloured wooden doors and panels. You will also pass the new community centre (inaugurated in 2022) with gym, shop, landlord headquarters etc.
When the walkway reaches a parking, the architecture changes as you enter the newer Nummenranta. One block farther you reach a street, Pispalantie.
To get to the river by the railway bridge, continue along the walkway, which starts gently turning to the right. To the left, facing the Helsinki highway, is student housing. To the right, facing the river and with parking, there is private housing. After these the path ends in a T-junction. To the right is the pass towards the centre over the former railbed, to the right is the temporary pedestrian bridge. Continue downstream along the riverside path, pass below Tuomaansilta, reaching the riverside Jokikatu, and turn left for Piispankatu when the street ends, then right for the cathedral.
To continue through the campuses, turn left to Pispalantie and take the underpass on the right after 300 m. If you follow the walkway to the left after the underpass for the campus, you'll end up in Hämeenkatu. Instead, keep slightly to the right, leave TY's buildings for social sciences (Publicum) and pedagogy (Educarium) to your right and turn to the right before the building for law (Calonia), to get to the ÅA campus by a walkway lined by birches. Turn left and you'll pass the ÅA ASA building, named for the radio factory it used to house, then right to get down to Piispankatu, and finally left for the cathedral. For TY's main buildings, don't turn by the birches but cross the yard for a walkway. Halfway up the gentle slope turn to the right for stairs up the hill. Cross the road above the stairs and walk in between the university buildings to get to the hilltop.
You could also walk through the graveyard of Saint Catherine's Church: after the park, fork and playground, cross the street Inspehtorinkatu as soon as you hit it, for an entrance to your left. Walk calmly, don't cycle, don't bring a dog. If you don't stray away too far from the perimeter, you will get to an exit close to Caribia. Take a bus from there or continue to the underpass and through the campus.
The routes end in the centre or by a bus stop for going there.
Before returning to your accommodation you could end your walk with a coffee at Myllärintalo or the café by the cathedral entrance (if they are open). If you want to really feel you are back in the city – or if you never left – a beer or dinner on one of the restaurant boats is an appropriate ending.
There are toilets at the cafés and museums, mostly locked in off hours. Except for these, and the outhouse toilet by the road from the Koroinen farm, you are probably out of luck. The toilets at the upstream cafés might not be accessible by wheelchair. The outhouse toilet at Koroinen (100 m from the café, "WC" fingerposts by the walk) is unlocked, and has a wheelchair ramp, toilet paper and hand disinfection.
This is a safe route.
There are a few places where you do need to mind the traffic, especially by bike. The Vanhalinna hill does not have fences, so don't do anything stupid. Where you cross the harness racing loop, check carefully and cross swiftly, the sulkies are fast. With children these points apply doubly, the quays may require some attention, and you should keep together at the roadsides where motor traffic is allowed and where there are fast bikers. In winter, mind ice safety.
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