A major water damage incident at Helsinki’s Viikki Library forced its closure on Saturday after heavy flooding inundated large sections of the building, emergency services confirmed. Firefighters are pumping out thousands of litres of water from two floors following a sudden deluge that originated from the roof of the adjacent student cafeteria Unicafe, according to on-site witnesses and rescue officials.
The incident began shortly before 11:34 a.m. when the Helsinki Rescue Service received its first alert and dispatched five units to Viikinkaari 1, the address shared by the city’s municipal library and the University of Helsinki’s Viikki campus. “We have a medium-sized water damage operation underway at Viikinkaari,” said duty fire chief Timo Ustinov, speaking to Helsingin Sanomat just after 1:00 p.m. “Rainwater has entered the library interior and significant volumes are being removed.” Ustinov noted that the water had spread across two storeys and that crews were still assessing the full extent of damage. The library has been closed to the public until further notice.
A local Iltalehti reader who was on the scene described the situation as serious but not catastrophic. “There was a lot of water, but it wasn’t knee-deep,” the witness said. “The library was operating on self-service hours, so staff weren’t present. Someone called the fire brigade, and they arrived quickly.” The witness added that maintenance teams are now investigating how the water penetrated the building.
The flooding comes amid a broader pattern of extreme weather across Europe, with contrasting crises unfolding from northern Italy to the United Kingdom. In Veneto, regional authorities declared a state of emergency on Saturday as prolonged drought reduced the Po River to record lows and threatened agricultural production. “The situation is critical,” said Veneto’s regional president Alberto Stefani, citing a 21 per cent precipitation deficit since March. The national civil protection commissioner has been urged to convene an emergency basin committee to address saltwater intrusion and dwindling freshwater reserves.
Meanwhile, in Britain, a cross-party group of MPs and the Fabian Society called for water companies to fund the reopening of historic outdoor swimming pools, or lidos, as a public health measure during heatwaves. “Andy Burnham should use the forthcoming water bill to make companies responsible for providing places for people to swim,” said Andrew Pakes, Labour MP for Peterborough, whose constituency’s lido was saved from closure in 2024. The report highlights that only a third of the UK’s 300-plus lidos remain open, with many communities fighting to keep them operational.
Back in Helsinki, the Viikki Library incident remains under investigation. Firefighters expect pumping operations to continue through the afternoon, with property managers coordinating clean-up efforts. No injuries have been reported.
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