Aurinkokallio Daycare Center: design that nurtures the city's youngest
Aurinkokallio Daycare Center, a three‑story facility tucked into the sloping plot of Kannelmäki, Helsinki, opened in 2023 to replace a 1970s building. The new structure sits between mid‑rise apartments and the verdant edge of a forest park, creating an urban infill that respects both density and green continuity.
The building's low‑rise massing follows the land's gradient, its timber façade echoing the surrounding trees. Inside, the scent of pine mingles with the faint hum of a heater, while sunlight filters through large windows, casting patterned light on the soft carpet. A mother lingered at the doorway, hand hovering over the latch, pausing to gauge whether the space felt safe enough for her toddler; her brief hesitation resolved when the child's grin met the welcoming interior.
Balancing efficiency and safety
The project illustrates a structural tension between site efficiency—maximising limited urban land—and the imperative of child safety. By allocating generous play terraces that spill onto the park's edge, the designers reinterpret density not as confinement but as permeable, child‑scaled zones that invite spontaneous interaction with nature.
This approach aligns with a broader Nordic shift toward sustainable, community‑centric infill, where public amenities are woven into existing fabric rather than isolated. The centre's toys and hobby range, curated to echo the surrounding forest, reinforce the pedagogical aim of grounding early childhood experiences in the local environment.
It matters because the centre demonstrates that dense cities can nurture early development without sacrificing green continuity, offering a model for future urban childcare.
In the quiet after the day ends, the building's glass reflects the park's twilight, a reminder that play and place are inseparable.
Urban infill can nurture children and nature together.






















