Verla Groundwood and Board Mill
UNESCO site
Date of Insscription: 1996
Verla Groundwood and Board Mill, located in the northern
part of the Kymi River Valley in southeast Finland, consists of the Mill, the
associated residential area and the power plants. The mill buildings and the
workers' houses mostly date from the 1890s and from the beginning of the 20th
century. The property is a very well preserved example of a forest industry
settlement of the late 19th century. Similar communities were established in
coniferous forest zones in northern Europe and in North America, where wood as
a raw material and water as a source of energy were easily at hand.
The first groundwood mill in Verla was founded in 1872 and
the board mill began operations ten years later. The existing buildings, which
are architecturally harmonious, date back to the turn of the 20th century. The
mill itself ceased to operate in 1964, and all the machines and items related
to production were left in the mill as they were when the production ceased.
The buildings and the machines were carefully conserved and turned into a
museum, and the Verla Mill Museum was officially opened in 1972.
The property itself consists of approximately 50 buildings
in an area of 23 ha. The Verlankoski Rapids separate the production area from
the residential area. On the rapids, there are three water power plants from
three different decades, the newest one dating from the 1990s. The mill owner’s
residence and a park from the late 19th century dominate the village. The sheer
rock face above the rapids bears a prehistoric rock painting, representing
fishing and hunting.
Criterion (iv): The Verla Groundwood and Board Mill and its
associated habitation are an outstanding and remarkably well preserved example
of the small-scale rural industrial settlement associated with pulp, paper, and
board production that flourished in northern Europe and North America in the
19th and early 20th centuries, of which only a handful survives to the present
day.
Source: unesco.org
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