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Lepakko


Lepakko


Lepakko or Lepakkoluola was a self-managed social centre and a music venue in Ruoholahti, Helsinki, Finland, functioning from 1979 to 1999.

History

The building was a paint company warehouse located at Porkkalankatu 1 in the Ruoholahti district of Helsinki, which had been built in 1940. It then became derelict and the City Council of Helsinki opened a hostel for alcoholics on 5 December 1967, in response to public outcry when several homeless alcoholics had frozen to death in the cold of winter. It hosted up to one thousand people and was called Liekkihotelli, or the Flame Hotel.

Occupation

Lepakko (Finnish for bat) was squatted in 1979 and used as a music venue, also providing practice rooms for bands, theatre rehearsal space and a dance school. In addition, a motorcycle gang had a workshop. It took its name from the logo of the paint company which still was stencilled on the walls; it had been a butterfly, but the young people saw it more as a bat. It was the first public squat in Finland and its lifetime was extended by negotiating with the city council. It was then leased for a small fee by the Elmu association. The centre became a thriving self-managed social centre during the 1980s and 1990s.

Legacy

Lepakko was evicted and demolished in 1999. It had been a foundational venue for Finnish punk music and hosted Radio City, a commercial radio station.

See also

  • Sosiaalikeskus Satama

References

Further reading

  • review on a book about the building in the online edition of Helsingin Sanomat (English translation from the international edition of HS)
  • 30 minute report from Yle
  • Helsingin Sanomat (international edition): "Holy Hermione, Robin – they're bulldozing the Batcave!"
  • Bottà, Giacomo (2021). "Helsinki, Finland: Liberalisation, Shifting Night Clusters and Gentrification (2010–2020)". Electronic Cities. pp. 165–181. doi:10.1007/978-981-33-4741-0_11. hdl:10138/357091. ISBN 978-981-33-4740-3. S2CID 235015215.

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Lepakko by Wikipedia (Historical)


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