Kemi in the context of "Finnish national road 4"

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👉 Kemi in the context of Finnish national road 4

Finnish national road 4 (Finnish: Valtatie 4 or Nelostie; Swedish: RiksvÀg 4 or Riksfyran; also known as Lahti Highway (Finnish: LahdenvÀylÀ; Swedish: Lahtisleden) in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area) is a highway in Finland. It is the main route from Helsinki to Northern Finland and a major road link in the country. It runs from Erottaja in Helsinki to Sami Bridge in Utsjoki. The road is 1,295 kilometres (805 mi) long, making it Finland's longest highway. The road is also part of the European route E75 and of TERN; the section between Oulu and Kemi is part of the European route E8.

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Kemi in the context of SodankylÀ

SodankylĂ€ (Finnish: [ˈsodɑƋˌkylĂŠ]; Northern Sami: Soađegilli [ˈsoÌŻÉ‘Ă°eˌkilːiː]; Inari Sami: Suáđigil; Skolt Sami: SuĂ€Êčđjel) is a municipality of Finland. It is located in the region of Lapland, and lies at the northern end of Highway 5 (E63) and along Highway 4 (E75). The Kitinen River flows near the center of SodankylĂ€. Its neighbouring municipalities are Inari, KemijĂ€rvi, KittilĂ€, Pelkosenniemi, Rovaniemi, and Savukoski. The municipality has two official languages: Finnish and Northern Sami.

The municipality has a population of 8,067, (30 June 2025) which makes it the fourth largest municipality in Lapland after Rovaniemi, Tornio and Kemi, and at the same time the largest municipality in population that does not use the title of city or town. It covers an area of 12,415.50 square kilometres (4,793.65 sq mi) of which 718.65 km (277.47 sq mi) is water, making it the second largest municipality in Finland in terms of area, right after its neighboring municipality of Inari. The population density is 0.69 inhabitants per square kilometre (1.8/sq mi).

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Kemi in the context of Bertel Strömmer

Bertel Strömmer (11 July 1890, Ikaalinen – 18 April 1962, Tampere) was a Finnish architect. Strömmer worked as Tampere City Architect years 1918–53 and most of his work is located in Tampere. Strömmer designed both private and public buildings. Strömmer's most famous works include the Grand Hotel Tammer, the Tampere bus station and the town hall in Kemi.

Bertel Strömmer was the son of a pharmacist Sven Evert Strömmer and his wife Elin Ida Fredrika Fabritius. He graduated in 1908 and graduated as an architect in 1913. In 1914 married Ros-Mari Nordenswan with whom he had eight children.

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