Attention has turned to the next rising destinations in Finnish Laplandâone of which lies along the Swedish border in Torne Valley, an area with a long and rich yet largely forgotten tourism history. From Aavasaksa Hill, the National Landscape offers a view over the Torne River toward Sweden...
Attention has turned to the next rising destinations in Finnish Laplandâone of which lies along the Swedish border in Torne Valley, an area with a long and rich yet largely forgotten tourism history. From Aavasaksa Hill, the National Landscape offers a view over the Torne River toward Sweden. Credit: Tanja Lauri / Arctic Feeling
In Finland, Laplandâs tourism has grown so rapidly that Rovaniemi, the regionâs capital and numberâone destination, where Santa Claus has his office, is already operating at full capacity. There is very little room left to welcome more tourists to the city located in the Arctic Circle. Attention has therefore turned to the next rising destinations in Laplandâone of which has been found along the Swedish border in Torne Valley, an area with a long and rich but largely forgotten tourism history.
The fastestâgrowing tourism spot in the region is Aavasaksa Hill in Ylitornio. Aavasaksa lies less than a twoâhour drive southwest of Rovaniemi, at a distance of about 120 km. And with Laplandâs significant size, that is considered quite close.
The hill features a scenic lookout over one of the national landscapes, down on the river valley all the way to Sweden. It also has a protected hiking area, with a small ski center on its other side. Recently, 80 new accommodation cabins and a 1,000âsquareâmeter main building were completed on the hill.
"Rapid tourism growth brings, in addition to regional vitality, various challenges. On top of sudden changes to land use and the local environment, uncontrolled tourism leads to congestion as well as rising housing and service prices," says Jarkko Saarinen, Professor of Human Geography and Sustainable Tourism at the University of Oulu, Northern Finland.
This phenomenon has already been visible in Rovaniemi, for example, through rising housing prices and concerns about the capacity of health care and rescue services.
"Mass tourism generates income and new jobs, but these do not always primarily benefit local residents and businesses. The destination images tourism uses and creates can also differ significantly from the identity of the local population," Saarinen continues.
Local voices must be heard from the earliest stages of tourism development
Professor Saarinen and the University of Oulu are currently coordinating a project on developing cultural and creative tourism in Torne river valley. The project is part of the larger international CROCUS initiative, which aims to develop tourism in a culturally sustainable way across nine countries. Torne Valley was selected as one of the locations due to its long tourism history and rich crossâborder local identity.
"Torne Valley residents do not want Christmasâcommercialized mass tourism like the one in Rovaniemi," says Iida Pyykkö, project researcher at the University of Oulu, who has collected local opinions for the project.
During the summer and autumn, the project organized open workshops for local residents in the neighboring villages of Ylitornio, Finland, and ĂvertorneĂ„, Sweden, along with extensive surveys aimed at residents, cultural actors, associations, entrepreneurs, and visitors. The responses highlight both enthusiasm for tourism development and a strong desire to maintain local culture and environmental sustainability.
"Local residents and entrepreneurs should be involved in tourism development, preferably from the very beginning, so that the wellâknown global phenomenonâwhere local culture is easily overshadowed by mass tourismâcan be avoided. Sustainable tourism also more broadly benefits the regionâs residents and vitality, not only tourists or a few operators," Saarinen says.
Residents who participated in the project, both in Finland and Sweden, responded very positively to tourism development and the opportunities it offers.
Locals stress that tourism development must reflect the regionâs unique crossâborder cultureâdistinct from the exotic imagery often used to market Lapland.
"Torne Valley is sold with the same wild and remote Lapland imageryâreindeer and huskies. Those images arenât true. We have a unique cultural identity shaped by two nations, including a shared language and humor," says local cultural historian, playwright, and local dialect "MeĂ€nkieli" expert Hannu Alatalo.
Locals also hope for yearâround tourism development, such as improved crossâborder transport connections and new recreational sites along the river. Key attractions like Kukkolankoski with white water, Luppio and Aavasaksa hills are seen as important but in need of further development. Preserving cultural heritage and nature is highlighted as essential so that both residents and visitors can benefit from tourism sustainably.
Recently, plans to build wind turbines in Torne Valley have caused significant concern. Residents fear these would conflict with the growing demand for "coolcation" destinationsâquiet, peaceful places where nature is the main attraction.
Next, the development project will design new crossâborder cultural tourism routes and attractions. It will also map local cultural actors and bring together creative professionals from across the region, building on earlier collaboration projects.
With its genuine tranquility, midnight sun with surprisingly flourishing riverside nature in summer, and winterâwonderland landscapes in the winter, Torne Valley offers the kind of authentic Lapland calm that many travelers now seek.
As one local survey respondent put it: "Torne River Valley is not just a travel destinationâit is a beloved home to many. Overly commercial and intrusive tourism is also a threat."
Citation: Laplandâs next hotspot after Santa? Torne Valley seeks sustainable tourism (2025, December 19) retrieved 19 December 2025 from https://phys.org/news/2025-12-lapland-hotspot-santa-torne-valley.html
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