Vartiovuori Observatory


Vartiovuori observatory is the former observatory of the Royal Academy of Turku. The building was completed 1819, and was designed by the German architect Carl Ludvig Engel. The neoclassical observatory is a typical Engel work, with obvious similarities to the Helsinki University Observatory and Pulkovo Observatory, which he also designed. The observatory is located atop of the Vartiovuori hill in Turku, close to the cathedral and Aura river and it's visible from many places in the city center.

The Great Fire Of Turku

The observatory and several wooden houses on the hill were saved from the Great Fire of Turku 1827. Observatory is famous for a note made by German astronomer Friedrich Wilhelm Argelander who was working at 4 September 1827:
or "Here the observations were stopped by a horrible fire which burn the whole city into ashes but, thanks to God, left the observatory intact".
The Academy moved to Helsinki after the Fire and got a new observatory there few years later. Instruments were moved to Helsinki and finally Vartiovuori Observatory became defunct 1834. In 1836 Åbo Navigationsskola moved into empty observatory building and stayed there until 1967. Between 1986 and 1998 building was a maritime museum and during the repair of the Turku Art Museum 1999-2005, the changing exhibitions were placed in observatory. Currently and also in the picture, a flag of the foundation Stiftelsen för Åbo Akademi flies over the building.