1955–67: Light rail plan . trams built in 1959 were built with provisions for use on the originally planned light rail-type metro system. The initial motion for building a metropolitan railway system in Helsinki was made in September 1955, though during the five decades beforehand, the idea of a tunneled urban railway for Helsinki had surfaced several times. A suburban traffic committee ('''') was formed under the leadership of (1908–1981), and in late 1955, the committee set to work on the issue of whether or not there was truly a need for a tunneled public transport system in Helsinki. After nearly four years of work, the committee presented its findings to the city council. The committee estimated that the population of Helsinki would grow rapidly, so the capacity of the street network would not be enough for the growing amount of private car traffic and public traffic. The committee proposed moving public transport underground, which would free the overground street network for private car traffic and keep both the direct costs and the indirect costs of public transport in bounds. The findings of the committee were clear: Helsinki needed a metro system built on separate
right-of-way. This was the first time the term "metro" was used to describe the planned system. At the time the committee did not yet elaborate on what kind of vehicles should be used on the metro:
trams,
heavier rail vehicles,
buses or
trolleybuses were all alternatives. The city council's reaction to the committee's presentation was largely apathetic, with several council members stating to the press that they did not understand anything about Castrén's presentation. Despite the lacklustre reception, Castrén's committee was asked to continue its work, now as the metro committee, although very little funding was provided. In March 1963 the committee led by Reino Castrén and
Gunnar Strenius presented its proposal for the Helsinki Metro system. On a technical level this proposal was very different from the system that was finally realised. In the 1963 proposal the metro was planned as a
light rail system, running in tunnels a maximum of below the surface (compared to in the finalized system), and with stations placed at shorter intervals (for instance, the committee's presentation shows ten stations between
Sörnäinen and
Ruoholahti, compared to the six in the realized system). This was rejected after lengthy discussions as too extensive. In 1964 the city commissioned experts from
Hamburg,
Stockholm and
Copenhagen to evaluate the metro proposal. Their opinions were unanimous: a metro was needed and the first sections should be built by 1970. Although no official decision to build a system along the lines proposed by Castrén was ever made, several provisions for a light rail metro system were made during the 1950s–1960s, including separate lanes on the
Kulosaari and
Naurissaari bridges, By 1966 the planning had already cost 4.67 million
markka while the budget of the city of Helsinki had reserved 475 million markka for the period from 1968 to 1977 despite no decision of actually building the metro yet being made.
1967–69: Heavy rail plan In late 1967, Reino Castrén departed Helsinki for
Calcutta, where he had been invited as an expert in public transport. Prior to his departure Castrén indicated he planned to return to Helsinki in six months and continue his work as leader of the metro committee. For the duration of Castrén's absence, (1929–1989) was appointed as the leader of the committee. However, by the time Castrén returned, Valtanen's position had been made permanent. Following his appointment Valtanen informed the other members of the committee that the plans made under Castrén's leadership were outdated, and now the metro would be planned as a heavy rail system in deep tunnels mined into
bedrock. In connection to this, the idea of a tight network of several light rail lines was abandoned and a decision was made to build two lines conforming to the railway track standard: one line from
Haukilahti in Espoo to
Puotinharju and another line, the so-called U-Metro line from
Haaga via
Erottaja and the
Helsinki Market Square to
Maunula, which would use the same track width as the main railway network in Finland.
1969–82: Construction The decision to start construction of the metro was delayed because of votes held by the city council of Helsinki. The
Left Alliance and some of the council members from the
Swedish People's Party of Finland, as well as the liberals, supported construction of the metro, but the
National Coalition Party opposed the project for the entirety of its design. The idea was to have the construction of the line completed by the year 1977. Construction of a testing track from the
depot in
Roihupelto to
Herttoniemi was begun in 1969 and finished in 1971. The first prototype train, units M1 and M2, arrived from the
Valmet factory in Tampere on 10 November 1971, with further four units (M3–M6) arriving the following year. Car M1 burned in the metro depot in 1973. . 's entry featuring a cartoon mole won the favour of the general public. When the construction of the metro started, the companies
Valmet and
Strömberg started developing a series of metro trains suitable for the Helsinki Metro together with other companies. Strömberg made an extensive definition of the technics used for the rolling stock and also made a specific research contract with the metro. As a result, three double-carriage trains were made for test use from 1971 and 1972, and these trains were used for test drives on the test track built between the current depot and the
Siilitie metro station. These tests showed numerous problems, for example too little power when driving at a slow speed. The test trains used
DC motors. After the tests, a new series of trains was designed in 1974, of which the three first prototype units (numbers 101 to 106) were built in 1977. A
VR Class Dv12 locomotive hauled the first carriage pair of the new test trains from the Valmet aeroplane factory in
Tampere to Helsinki on Monday 20 June 1977. The new train series was named
M100 and it was equipped with
induction motors controlled by a
variable-frequency drive. The motor control device built for the Helsinki Metro, named SAMI ("Strömbergin Asynkroni Moottori Invertterikäyttö") also became popular elsewhere, and it was used in Finland for example in the control system for the fuel switching device at the
Loviisa nuclear power plant. The first test trains were originally designed as automatic trains that did not need a driver. Already at that time, the Helsinki Metro had been planned as an automatic metro system, and test drives with automatic metro trains were started on 5 April 1974. This plan for automatic metro trains was later abandoned and replaced with a return to completely manually controlled trains and a conventional railway track signal system. One of the test trains caught fire at the depot in 1973,
Corruption scandal In 1974 the metro committee ordered a prototype for a train in the series and gave a guarantee about a follow-up order, bypassing the city council. In summer 1976,
Teuvo Aura, the
mayor of Helsinki, signed an agreement with Valmet and
Strömberg to purchase 13 trains of six carriages each required for the metro from them. The provincial government started investigating suspicions of Aura overstepping his authority in 1979. A committee formed by the police and the city council investigated the involvement of the mayor, the city council, the metro committee and its leader in the decisions and use of money. The investigation led to all charges being dropped. On 23 October 1987 Valtanen was convicted to one year and nine months in prison for having taken 80 thousand
Deutsche Mark and a motor boat as bribes from
Siemens. Feeder traffic was started in phases in early September 1982, and was originally limited to outside rush hours. In 1986 the feeder lines started using a
proof-of-payment system, which ended in 1992. The Metro did not immediately win the approval from inhabitants of eastern Helsinki, whose direct bus links to the city centre had now been turned into feeder lines for the Metro. Within six months of the Metro's official opening, a petition signed by 11,000 people demanded the restoration of direct bus links. Subsequently, the timetables of the feeder services were adjusted and opposition to the Metro mostly died down. These trains are based on
Deutsche Bahn's
Class 481 EMUs used on the
Berlin S-Bahn network. (See section
The future below.) On 1 January 2007,
Kalasatama station, between the
Sörnäinen and
Kulosaari stations, was opened. It serves the new "Sörnäistenranta-Hermanninranta" (Eastern Harbour) area, a former port facility redeveloped as its functions were relocated to the new
Port of Vuosaari in the east of the city. On 8 November 2009, the
Rautatientori station, under the Central Railway Station, was closed due to flooding caused by a burst water main. After renovations, the station reopened for public use on 15 February 2010. The lifts were fully replaced; the new ones opened on 21 June 2010. On 23 August 2019, heavy rain caused the Rautatientori station to close once again due to flooding. The station reopened in a matter of days, but the lifts again took many months to fix, finally reopening on 17 March 2020.
2006 onwards: The western extension network along with the metro line and their planned extensions under construction in summer 2006. The construction of the Western extension from
Ruoholahti to
Matinkylä in Espoo was approved by the Espoo city council in 2006. Construction began in 2009 and the extension was opened on 18 November 2017. This first stage of the extension was long, with eight new stations, two in Helsinki and six in Espoo and was built entirely in a tunnel excavated in bedrock. After first stage of the Western extension opened, the bus lines in Southern Espoo were reconfigured as feeder lines to either Matinkylä or Tapiola metro stations instead of terminating at
Kamppi in the centre of Helsinki. After much outcry, four new peak-time lines began running into Kamppi on 22 August 2018. Before the extension of the metro, trains could be a maximum length of three units (each unit being two cars) but the new stations west of Ruoholahti were built shorter than the existing stations because it was originally planned to introduce driverless operation. The driverless project was cancelled in 2015, but the shorter new stations mean that the maximum train length is reduced to two units, shorter than on the original sections of the metro. To increase capacity, the automatic train protection system theoretically permits headway as short as 90 seconds, if required in the future. Due to most of the metro network on the side of Helsinki being outdoors, it is not possible to automate the metro in its current iteration. Full automation (GoA4) of the network would require the entire system being in tunnel. The extreme weather conditions in Finland cause the breaking distances of the metro trains, on tracks running outdoors, to vary even by up to 400%. One option could be to separate the network into two separate lines. The decision to fund the construction of the second stage, from
Matinkylä to
Kivenlahti, was taken by the Espoo city council and the state of Finland in 2014. Construction began in late 2014. This stage of extension is long and includes five new stations and a new depot in Sammalvuori. All of the track, including the depot, was built in tunnels. The line opened for passenger traffic on the 3rd of December 2022. As with the first phase to Matinkylä, the feeder lines that used ro run to Matinkylä bus terminal were changed to run to Espoonlahti bus terminal in
Lippulaiva shopping centre. Also in common with the first phase, many people were unhappy with the reorganisation of bus lines. Those living in
Kivenlahti and
Saunalahti, especially, were annoyed at direct bus lines into Kamppi, taking 25–30 minutes, being replaced with feeder lines to Espoonlahti, a transfer to the metro and a half-hour metro ride into the city centre.
Timetable displays The timetable displays were renewed in 2012 and were taken into use in December 2012 together with the renewal of the metro control system. The old timetable displays were quite old-fashioned backlit LCD displays. Spare parts were no longer available and because of this, the
Kalasatama metro station did not have any timetable displays for a long time, nor did the
Kulosaari metro station after it had been renovated. One of the old timetable displays has been left in place at the
Ruoholahti metro station. One of the old control boards has also been preserved, and it is on display at the
Hakaniemi metro station. In April 2006 blue lights and floor markings were added to metro stations to signify the stopping place of shorter metro trains. As well as the timetable displays, some stations also have
LED displays on the upper levels, showing the termini of the following trains and the time left until they reach the station. For a long time, these estimated times were based on the timetables instead of the actual metro traffic, but as the new control system was taken into place in early 2020, the systems have been integrated together.
Timeline == Network ==