, Eliel Saarinen, Albertina Östman, and
Herman Gesellius in the late 1890s Saarinen was born in
Rantasalmi on 20 August 1873 to
Lutheran clergyman Juho Saarinen and his wife, Selma, . Saarinen was educated in Helsinki at the
Helsinki University of Technology. From 1896 to 1905 he worked as a partner with
Herman Gesellius and
Armas Lindgren at the firm
Gesellius, Lindgren, Saarinen. His first major work with the firm, the Finnish pavilion at the
Paris 1900 World Fair, exhibited an extraordinary convergence of stylistic influences: Finnish wooden architecture, the British
Gothic Revival, and the
Jugendstil. Saarinen's early manner was later christened the Finnish
National Romanticism and culminated in the
Helsinki Central railway station (designed 1904, constructed 1910–14). From 1910 to 1915 he worked on the extensive city-planning project of Munksnäs-Haga and later published a book on the subject. In January 1911 he became a consultant in city planning for
Tallinn,
Governorate of Estonia and was invited to
Budapest to advise in city development. In 1912, a brochure written by Saarinen about the planning problems of Budapest was published. He was runner up behind
Walter Burley Griffin in an international competition to design the new Australian capital city of
Canberra in 1912, but the following year he received the first place award in an international competition for his plan of the city of
Reval, now known as Tallinn. From 1917 to 1918 Saarinen worked on the city-plan for greater
Helsinki. He also designed a series of postage stamps issued 1917 and the
Finnish markka banknotes introduced in 1922. After the divorce from his first wife, Mathilde (who then married Herman Gesellius), on March 6, 1904, Saarinen married his second wife,
Louise (Loja) Gesellius, a sculptor in
Helsinki, and the younger sister of
Herman Gesellius. They had a daughter
Eva-Lisa (Pipsan) on March 31, 1905, and a son
Eero on August 20, 1910. ==Move to the United States==