Difference between revisions of "Zone:StHenrikArt"
m (Text replacement - "Lounais-Suomi" to "Lounais-Suomi") |
|||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
|name = StHenrikArt | |name = StHenrikArt | ||
|image = [[File:StHenrikArt.jpg|350px]] | |image = [[File:StHenrikArt.jpg|350px]] | ||
− | |location = [[Turku, Lounais-Suomi|Turku]], [[Lounais-Suomi]], [[Country:Finland|Finland]] | + | |location = [[Turku, Lounais-Suomi|Turku]], [[Region:Lounais-Suomi|Lounais-Suomi]], [[Country:Finland|Finland]] |
|created = 2018-01-14 19:23:22 | |created = 2018-01-14 19:23:22 | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | '''StHenrikArt''' is a [[zone|turfzone]] in [[Turku, Lounais-Suomi|Turku]] in the [[region]] of [[Lounais-Suomi]] (Southwestern Finland) in [[Country:Finland|Finland]]. The zone is located in the county of [[Varsinais-Suomi]] and is counted as a [[Holy zones|holy zone]]. | + | '''StHenrikArt''' is a [[zone|turfzone]] in [[Turku, Lounais-Suomi|Turku]] in the [[region]] of [[Region:Lounais-Suomi|Lounais-Suomi]] (Southwestern Finland) in [[Country:Finland|Finland]]. The zone is located in the county of [[Varsinais-Suomi]] and is counted as a [[Holy zones|holy zone]]. |
== Placement == | == Placement == |
Revision as of 16:56, 24 September 2020
StHenrikArt | |
---|---|
Information | |
Location | Turku, Lounais-Suomi, Finland |
Created | 2018-01-14 19:23:22 |
StHenrikArt at Turfgame.com |
StHenrikArt is a turfzone in Turku in the region of Lounais-Suomi (Southwestern Finland) in Finland. The zone is located in the county of Varsinais-Suomi and is counted as a holy zone.
Placement
Outside St. Henry´s Ecumenical Art Chapel on the island of Hirvensalo by the road "Seitskärsgatan".
St. Henry´s Ecumenical Art Chapel
The artist and minister Hannu Konola dreamt even as a young boy about a place where people could gather and be at peace without any limitations. It would be a place where light and art could speak to the deepest human emotions, voicing the intangible reality in a way that mere words cannot. It would be a place which would bring joy and hope. It would be a building which would provide the opportunity to experience the sacred, an encounter between God and man.
In the beginning , there was a fish. Or, actually, a block of wood with a shape that was inspired by a fish, which architect Matti Sanaksenaho carved with a knife on a fishing trip to Lapland. The shape of that carving was the basis for the winning entry in the architecture competition for the Ecumenical Art Chapel.