A map of 1387 sports and nature sites in Päijät-Häme.

A smoke sauna on Lake Vähä-Kelkute. It can be rented. It is near a rental cabin.
Kylpylän sauna or Kylpylänrannan rantakylpylä or Kylpylänranta sauna or rantakylpyla is a sauna / spa next to Kylpylän beach on Lake ruotsalainen.
This sauna can only be used when you rent Kelkutte's savottakämpa
The Lehtinen islands in Padasjoki has a sauna that can used by anyone during the boating season. <a href="https://paijanteenvirkistysalueyhdistys.fi/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/08-LehtistenSaaret-lahestymiskartta.pdf">official .PDF of Lehtisten Saaret</a>
The Mustankallio water tower offers rental facilities for meetings, training, and events, accommodating up to 40 people, with stunning views of Lahti. Rentals are available exclusively for companies from 8 AM to 10 PM, with an option for midnight extension at an additional fee. Prices are €800 for the full day, or €600 for either half-day. Catering is the client's responsibility, and VAT is added to rental costs. The premises include basic furnishings but lack crockery and cutlery. The facilities are not wheelchair accessible, and safety regulations restrict fire usage and fireworks. Reservations must be confirmed a month in advance.
A sauna that is available for anyone to use during the boating season. There is a 10€ sauna fee / hour to use this sauna. If you are more than one person a sauna fee of 5€ / hour, per person is collected. So if there are 4 of you it costs 20€ an hour total. These fees enable tree maintenance at the sites.. There is a sauna shift reservation board to reserve your time. This sauna is only in use during the boating season. <a href="https://paijanteenvirkistysalueyhdistys.fi/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/11-Virtosaari-lahestymiskartta.pdf">official .PDF of Virtosaari</a>


A cabin for 12 people located in Evo's camping area. Beach sauna, barbecue shed and boat in the area. The room has oven heating and gas lighting. Based on the water samples taken in July 2020, the water in the well located in Kelkutte's Savottakämpa is suitable for household water, i.e. suitable for drinking.Alueella on erikseen varattavissa savusauna Luppo.
Tainionvirta canoeing route break.
Toilet
Lammassaari laavu
Kalainsaaren keittokatos


For national-park rules, season tips, and the official trail description for this ridge walk in Päijänne National Park, start with Metsähallitus on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Päijänne lists practical trail facts—blue markings, easy grade, where the toilets sit, and what is not provided along the path(2). Visit Lahti sets the wider scene: Pulkkilanharju is a long esker chain across Lake Päijänne, linked by bridges including Karisalmi suspension bridge, part of Salpausselkä UNESCO Global Geopark, and tied to the story of the Päijänne water tunnel that supplies the capital region(3). Lähtöportti’s spring hike write-up adds ground-level texture—steep first climb onto the ridge, rocky and rooted tread in places, duckboards on wet sections, a small sand beach beside Päijänne, and how the blue markings lead through a roughly 2.2 km core loop with an optional add-on via Viinasaari for a longer outing(4). The Pulkkilanharju nature trail is about 3.9 km as one walking route on our map in Asikkala, in the Päijät-Häme lake district. Brochures often package the marked circuit as about 4.4 km with a shorter 2.2 km loop inside that figure(2)(4). The walk threads pine esker forest with lake glimpses on both sides; information boards describe Ice Age landforms and mire development along the nature-trail section(2)(4). About 1.8 km from the start you pass Karisalmen sillan kesäkioski, a summer kiosk by Karisalmi bridge—handy for a drink or ice cream when it is open. The same knot is where Valtakunnallinen pyöräilyreitti nro 4 runs on the carriage-way network; day hikers often notice cyclists crossing the area even though the marked nature path itself is a foot route. Services on the trail are light: there are no official campfire sites on the marked hiking circuit, and Visit Päijänne notes the nearest WC is back at the Karisalmi parking area, with the seasonal kiosk beside the bridge(2). Shops and fuller services sit in Vääksy and Kalkkinen(2). Combine the outing with the Päijänne scenic road between Vääksy and Sysmä—the drive in is part of the classic lakeland experience(3)(4).
Päijätsalo Nature Trail is about 6 km of marked hiking on Päijätsalo island beside Lake Päijänne in Sysmä, Päijät-Häme. Metsähallitus lists the route on Luontoon.fi (1), and the City of Sysmä’s Päijätsalo recreation area page describes road access from Sysmä, information boards, and the separate BikePolku Päijätsalo mountain-bike circuit marked in blue (2). The area lies partly in Päijänne National Park and within the Salpausselkä UNESCO Global Geopark (2). Starting from the Pyydysniemi shore, you soon pass Pyydysniemi nuotiopaikka, then about a kilometre along Pyydysniemen tulentekopaikka with Metsähallitus-supplied firewood at the site and Pyydysniemi puucee close by. Roughly midway you reach Päijätsalon näkötorni on the hilltop—the island’s best-known landmark. Visit Lahti warns that from April 2025 the tower has stayed closed because of rot in load-bearing timbers; check their Päijätsalo page and the City of Sysmä news for updates before planning a climb (3)(4). A spring 2025 notice on the City of Sysmä site quotes Metsähallitus confirming you can still walk the nature trail normally while specialists assess the tower (4). Toward the end of this line you reach Päijätsalo pysäköintialue, where many drivers start or finish. By boat, the City of Sysmä notes a small-craft dock at the Pyydysniemi campfire site and a second, larger-vessel dock about 100 m north (2). Retkipaikka’s walk-through describes blue and red paint blazes, a stiff climb toward the tower, a rocky stretch nicknamed Kivikkopolku on the return leg toward parking, and roughly two hours on foot for a parking–tower–Pyydysniemi loop (5). If you also mountain-bike, BikePolku shares part of the island’s facilities—see our page for that route.
The Pirunkirkko hiking route is about 12.8 km of marked walking through Heinola’s Paistjärvi recreation area in Päijät-Häme, linking lake shores, forest ridges, and day-trip facilities from Niinilampi toward Ketturiutta, Sonnanen, and Harjulampi. Metsähallitus describes the shorter Pirunkirkon kierros loop around Pirunkirkko and Iso-Vuorttunen as challenging, partly dim terrain with yellow markings; the same marking style applies on the loop sections visitors use to reach the Devil’s Church rock shelter(1). For current route notes and the loop description, start from the Luontoon.fi Pirunkirkon kierros page(1). Visit Lahti highlights Paistjärvi’s clear-water lakes and the scale of the lippaluola shelter at Pirunkirkko(2). Retkipaikka’s Luontopolkumies walk-through adds practical detail on how the loop connects forest road, lakeshore, and the bench-and-shelter space under the cliff(3). From Niinilampi pysäköintialue the path soon reaches Niinilampi tulentekopaikka by the pond—handy for a snack before longer kilometres. After several kilometres the Ketturiutta cluster brings Ketturiutta pysäköintialue, Ketturiutta grillikatos, several Ketturiutta and Ketturiutan nuotiopaikka fire sites, and dry toilets, so groups can grill or pause near the water. Sonnanen pysäköintialue sits on the way toward Harjulampi; the area is widely known for exceptionally clear lake water in trip writing. Near the route end, Harjulampi tulentekopaikka and Harjulampi kuivakäymälä close out the day-hike services. The headline landmark remains Pirunkirkko: a high rapakivi granite cliff shelter shaped by ice along a bedrock fracture, presented as a signature Salpausselkä UNESCO Global Geopark site in regional material(2). Climbing onto the rock shelf and returning along Iso-Vuorttunen’s shore is part of the classic shorter circuit; on this longer mapped route you still pass the same geotype within the wider Paistjärvi network.
Lamminpolku and Rajasuonpolku are a linked pair of circular paths in Artjärvi, Orimattila, in the Päijät-Häme region. The full walk is about 6.4 km as one mapped figure-eight: Lamminpolku leaves from Kimonkyläntie, and Rajasuonpolku is reached only via Lamminpolku. For current parking, facilities, firewood rules, and booking the reservable hut, see the City of Orimattila’s nature trails and outdoor routes page(1). The same authority lists routes in Fluent Outdoors(3). Outdoor blogger Mika Markkanen’s detailed walk-through on Retkipaikka describes markings, terrain, and how the 2023 realignment changed the climb off Lamminmäki(2). The highlight is Lamminmäki, the highest ground in Artjärvi at roughly 90 m above sea level, with views west over fields and toward Lake Säyhtee. Near Lammin laavu, about 3 km along the walk, a bird tower built in 2014 offers long views; independent trip write-ups note on the order of 119 species recorded from that tower over time(2). Several nature boards along Lamminpolku cover topics such as forest types, mire, crane, and woody plants(2). About 2.9 km from the start you reach Lammin laavu with a campfire place; the City of Orimattila notes a dry toilet and firewood that you must bring yourself on this section(1). Further along, near the Rajasuon side, Rajasuon laavu and Rajasuon partiotupa sit close together: another campfire place and a reservable scout hut (Artjärven Eränkävijät ry, booking via the association)(1)(2). The Orimattila listing warns that part of Rajasuonpolku may still be thinly marked in the field; route posts were renewed in autumn 2023 with further marking work planned(1). The walk mixes field edges, young forest, pine forest, narrow path, and longer forest-road sections. Markkanen reports yellow-and-white posts on Lamminpolku and blue markings on Rajasuonpolku, with grassy and overgrown spots where long trousers help even in summer(2). The steepest climb is up Lamminmäki on the eastern side of the circuit; after the 2023 update the very steep descent from the top was eased(2). Allow on the order of two hours for the full combination at a moderate pace(2). Orimattila is a short drive from Lahti; Artjärvi is a compact former parish centre merged into the city.
Villisikapolku is a point-to-point hiking trail in southern Päijät-Häme. It leaves the Artjärvi urban area and runs through forest toward the municipal boundary with Myrskylä. Myrskylä sits east of the route’s far end in the same region. The trail is about 9.6 km on our map, matching the City of Orimattila figure of about 10 km end to end(1). For parking, the rentable private kota on Heivatojantie, marking notes, and other operational details, rely on the City of Orimattila outdoor trails page(1). The route is marked in the terrain with orange wild-boar symbols, plaques, and orange reflectors(1). Artjärven Ahjo warns that heavy logging has weakened some markings and offers a downloadable PDF map of the trail(2). Terrain is forest path and easy-to-moderate forest floor between lake-dotted countryside—Pyhäjärvi, Säyhtee, and Villikkalajärvi lie in the wider Artjärvi landscape(1). Along Heivatojantie the municipality lists a private kota that can be rented; contact details appear on the city page(1). Near the Artjärvi end, Salmelan valaistu latu follows the same corridor as a winter lit ski track. A few kilometres from the start, the long Artjärven kotiseutupyöräilyreitti cycling route uses the same corridor, so you may meet cyclists where the networks overlap. A national sports-facility listing repeats the Salmelanrinteentie 2–4 address as an access point in Artjärvi(3); the city’s own directions centre on Pajatie 1 with a short walk along Salmelanrinteentie to the trail start(1). No YouTube clip met the trail-overview quality bar for this exact route; check the city page for updates(1).
Downloadable trail maps and the wider Hartola walking, skiing, and cycling network are summarised on the Municipality of Hartola recreation and outdoor routes pages, which list Kurenlahden polku among the routes linking the sports area and ridge line into Kuninkaanpolku (1). Visit Lahti’s partner listing for Raijan Arboretum explains the private tree collection beside the path—roughly one hectare, ongoing plantings since 2008, and a look-but-don’t-touch visiting rule (2). The trail is about 3.8 km as one marked hiking segment in Hartola, Päijät-Häme. It is not a loop on our map: it threads from the Tainionvirta shore through Koskenniskan and finishes at the Liikuntamaja sports cluster, where tennis courts, a disc field, fitness stairs, winter trails, and other municipality facilities sit along Visantie. Early on you pass Tainionvirran kalastusalueet, then Koskenniskan grillikatos and Koskenniskan venesatama on Aurinkorannantie—handy pause points before the path climbs toward the open Harju side. The same shore corner plugs into Kuninkaanpolku, Hartola, the accessible Kuninkaanpolku, esteetön Ekonpolku, and the Tainionvirran melontareitti/Hartola paddling line for longer days on water or foot. Toward Liikuntamaja you move past Liikuntamajan tenniskentät (3), Liikuntamajan pesäpallokenttä, Liikuntamajan kuntosali, Liikuntamajan lentopallokenttä, Liikuntamajan luistelukenttä ja kaukalo, Liikuntamajan kuntoportaat, and Hartola DiscGolfPark—use those pages for facility hours or bookings before you plan a combo outing. Underfoot it is easy forest walking with gentle elevation change; listings aimed at visitors quote about an hour at a normal pace and roughly twenty metres of ascent spread across the profile (3). There is no winter track grooming on the hiking line itself, so ice and drifted segments need the same care as any local forest path in snow (3). Trail posts carry white-painted tips so you can pick the line apart from older brown-signed posts that predated this addition (3).
Lusi nature trail is about 4.2 km of forest hiking in the Lusi village area of Heinola, Päijät-Häme. The City of Heinola publishes maps, a printable PDF, and the latest notes on winter use on its Lusi nature trail page(1). The same trail is often described locally as Lusin luontopolku; it introduces eastern Häme forest and shore habitats with information boards along the way. From mixed woodland you pass shallow Myllyjärvi and climb toward Siunatunvuori, where Siunatunvuoren laavu sits on one of the highest parts of the walk—a stop for a meal fire, with a dry toilet built with volunteer work by the Lusi village association as described on the city page(1). A short branch from Talvilahtitie offers roadside parking and a brief path to the lean-to area if you prefer not to walk the full line from the school(1). Toward the end of the route, the path meets the shared corridor used by Lusin kuntorata and Lusin valaistu latu beside Lusin school sports facilities: Lusin jääkiekkokenttä, Lusin luistelukenttä, Lusin pallokenttä, and Lusin liikuntasali on Lusinraitti. In winter the city states there is no maintenance on the full nature trail; only the lit opening section doubles as ski track(1). Luontopolkumies’ walk-through from 2021 notes yellow paint marks and signposts, tall grass and undergrowth in places, and a counterclockwise direction suggested by arrows at the school start(2). For boots-and-berries detail and time-on-feet, the same blog is worth reading(2). Etelä-Suomen Sanomat’s older feature on the trail adds colour on the lean-to and lakeside vegetation(3). Heinola is a good base in Päijät-Häme for this outing. Check the city page(1) before you go for closures and seasonal behaviour of the lit section.

Siltapolku - Salpausselkä Trails MTB is a short, two-way multi-use link on Lahti’s Salpausselkä ridge, inside the Salpausselkä UNESCO Global Geopark. For tunnel etiquette, winter ski-track crossings, speeds on the narrow hill climb, and how the Messiläntie outdoor bridge ties into other marked lines, start with the City of Lahti Siltapolku page(1). Visit Lahti’s mountain-bike pages for the region describe how narrow forest singletrack and multi-use corridors fit together on the ridge, including the longer loops this connector reaches into(2). Karoliina Kaski’s Retkipaikka report from Kintterön kymppi captures how the same trail system feels on the ground—clear arrow marking, busy multi-use corridors, and geopark forest that rewards calm pacing(3). The Municipality of Hollola describes Mörripolku as the Hollola-side link that meets the Messiläntie bridge—useful context when you are riding toward Hollola’s marked trails(4). The route is about 1.2 km point-to-point. Marking is yellow-and-blue arrows in both directions. Walking the whole line is easy; on a bike the hillside is moderate because the path is narrow and winding, while the lower flat section is easier(1). The line climbs from the Hämeenlinnantie and Reunakatu underpasses up to the newer Messiläntie outdoor bridge. Along the way it runs between Messiläntie and a groomed ski corridor, partly on a fresh trail strip beside the maintained outdoor route; in winter the city asks you not to cross the ski track except at marked spots so grooming is not damaged(1). In the underpass tunnels, stay to the side, expect oncoming walkers and riders, and ring a bell at the mouth when you are on a bike; in ski season yield to skiers on the bridge and tracks(1). On the ascent, keep speed moderate so you can pass others safely on tight bends(1). At the bridge end, a roughly 150 m two-way spur joins Kintterön kymppi - Salpausselkä Trails MTB: red arrows point toward Kintterö from the bridge, and yellow-blue arrows return toward the bridge from that loop(1). Along Siltapolku itself you can move between Riihelän Rinki - Salpausselkä trails MTB, Koneharjun yhdysreitti - Salpausselkä trails MTB, and the hiking line Siltapolku - Salpausselkä Trails, then continue over the bridge onto Mörripolku toward Hollola’s marked bike trails—or reverse the sequence from the Hollola direction(1)(4). The same landscape also links logically into Kintterön kymppi - Salpausselkä Trails MTB and Urheilukeskuksen ja Messilän kuntoradat when you are stitching a longer day on Salpausselkä. Lahti anchors the south Päijät-Häme side of this bridge segment. Near the lower metres of the line, the track passes within a few hundred metres of Liikuntastudio Zenana Hollola, Sisäpelikeskus PadelMarina, and Sisäpelikeskus PadelMarinan petankkikenttä on Tarmontie—handy if you are pairing outdoor riding with indoor training in the Salenius–Tarmontie service pocket.
Artjärvi local heritage cycling route is a loop of about 64 km through lake-and-farm countryside in Orimattila, Päijät-Häme. For the municipal description of this tour, brochure-style lengths, laavu rest points, and links toward the national cycling network, see the City of Orimattila cycling routes page(1). Artjärven Ahjo keeps older printed maps and planning notes that still help with on-the-ground navigation and longer stops in Artjärvi centre(2). About 10 km into the ride you can break at Pyykkinekan uimaranta, a village beach that also appears on the Lanskinjoen melontareitti paddling line if you combine water and land days. Near the northern lake shore, around 33 km, Tortolan tallit / maneesi sits just off the loop as an equestrian landmark. Closer to the western closure, Niinikosken ampumarata marks a quiet roadside point—ride considerately where sport shooting activities may be underway. At the start of the circuit, Villisikapolku branches as a short walking trail on the same footprint; Salmelan valaistu latu is a nearby winter ski track when snow conditions suit. Surfaces are mostly low-traffic rural asphalt with spells of fine gravel, a pattern Komoot users summarise as a moderate “three lakes” style lakeland road tour where wider tires feel safer on short unpaved links(3). For how a long training day on Orimattila’s roads feels—café stops, bike-path links from Lahti, and rolling fields—Pro Mustarousku’s report on a 70 km Kuivanto loop through Artjärvi adds useful colour even though it is not the same GPS line(4). Pack water and snacks; services cluster in village centres rather than every crossroad.
This segment is the western add-on to the signed Vellamo bike touring network between Sysmä and Hartola in Päijät-Häme: about 21 km as one line, shaped as a point-to-point link rather than its own loop. Visit Lahti presents the wider Hartola–Sysmä Vellamo ring as a road-signed touring circuit through farmland and shorelines, mixing gravel and quiet paved roads, with Tainionvirta river scenery and Lake Päijänne never far away(1). The Municipality of Sysmä points cyclists to local clubs and the regional bike-travel materials that pair with these countryside miles(2), and LAB’s regional bike tourism guide gives the broader Päijät-Häme context for linking stages(3). Riding west from the Nuoramoiset school cluster you soon pass typical village sports edges—ball field and an outdoor ice rink—before the line settles into mellower farm and forest roads toward Nuoramoisten uimapaikka, a practical swim and rest stop in the river-lake countryside with roughly six kilometres behind you. The second half bends north toward Virtaa, where village playing fields and the tennis court sit right on the junction bundle: here you meet the main Vellamo retkipyöräilyreitti: Sysmä - Hartola rengasreitti, can branch onto Vellamo retkipyöräilyreitti: Kalkkisten kierros for a longer lakeside loop, or note the nearby Tainionvirran melontareitti/Sysmä if your group mixes bikes and boats. Treat this spur as a quieter alternative approach to Virtaa when you are stitching together gravel days around Sysmä and Hartola; carry the current Vellamo map or GPX because seasonal forestry or field work can change how tempting a side lane feels even when the main network stays well marked.
This mapped line is a short cycling loop of about 0.2 km on Aurinkovuori in Asikkala, on the Second Salpausselkä ridge between Lake Päijänne and Lake Vesijärvi. It sits in the same hub as Aurinkovuori Trail Center, the municipal downhill and enduro bike area opened in summer 2022 in the old ski-slope terrain, which the City of Asikkala describes as starting beside the outdoor gym on the hilltop(1). The activities pages point to the municipal sports locations map and the Trail Center area map for full line layouts and descriptions(1). Visit Lahti’s Aurinkovuori destination page underlines how high the ridge rises above the lakes and how the wider outdoor area pairs laavut and viewpoints with lit multi-use paths in other seasons(2). Regional mountain biking materials highlight Aurinko–Ilves as a longer linked ride between Vääksy and Evo forests past Aurinkovuori(4). LAB’s write-up from the Pyörämatkailijan Päijät-Häme project notes four colour-coded difficulty levels at the Trail Center, no lift, summer-only use on the built downhill lines, and e-bikes as a practical way to regain the top—plus year-round maintained multi-use routes elsewhere on the hill for winter fat-biking(3). Right at the hilltop you are next to Aurinkovuori outdoor gym, fitness stairs, the ski trail centre, and Aurinkovuori laavu with a fireplace—handy for a break before or after laps.
The trail runs in Lahti on the Salpausselkä ridge, part of the Salpausselkä UNESCO Global Geopark. Kintterön kymppi - Salpausselkä Trails MTB follows the same signed line as the walking and running version Kintterön kymppi - Salpausselkä Trails: a roughly 10 km forest circuit marked with red arrows for clockwise travel, with about 190 m of climbing and a character built around narrow singletrack, rooty climbs, and short technical descents. For one-way rules, detours around damaged signs, mountain-bike skill expectations, and etiquette on a busy multi-use network, start with the City of Lahti Kintterön kymppi page(1). Visit Lahti publishes a mountain-bike-oriented description that matches the same layout and difficulty level(2). Karoliina Kaski’s Retkipaikka piece on walking Kintterön kymppi is a rich on-the-ground read on forest types, boardwalk sections, and how the red-arrow line feels when you are not in the saddle(3). Tiirismaan Latu ry partners with the city on Salpausselkä Trails and shares network background material(4). As described by the City of Lahti, the line threads Tapanila backwoods, winds past Likolammi and Koneharju, skirts an old-growth spruce stand, loops around the Kintterönsuo nature reserve with a mire crossing on duckboards, then climbs into rooty spruce around Hakalaukku, threads a few kettle depressions, and finishes with serpentine climbs and descents before rolling pine-forest riding back toward Tapanila. The route is marked one-way for safety, with clockwise (myötäpäivään) as the recommended bike direction; riding against the marking means extra care and solid GPS or map skills(1). Wet roots and stones raise the difficulty quickly—something the city calls out plainly for route choice after rain(1). Walkers and runners share the same corridor; the city asks people to skip headphones where sight lines are short, to expect fast riders from behind, and to keep dogs leashed(1). Along the roughly 10 km, our stop list clusters into two main service bands. Near the north-east side of the loop, within about the first kilometre from the Syke–Koneharju parking band, you pass Tapanilan hiihtomaja and Tapanilan ulkokuntolaitteet, with Jalkarannan koulun pallokenttä and Kankolanpuiston ulkokuntolaitteet close to the trail geometry as you work through the Tapanila side. Toward the south-west, around eight to nine kilometres into the circuit, Likolammen uimaranta Lahti and Likolammen ulkokuntolaitteet sit beside Likolammi—handy if you want a swim break or an outdoor-gym stop before closing the loop. Read more on our pages for each place when you want photos, maps, and amenities in one place. You can lengthen or vary a day from Urheilukeskuksen ja Messilän kuntoradat or Vanha Ravirata by tying in Tapanilan taival - Salpausselkä trails MTB, then branch into Kintterön kymppi; the City of Lahti also suggests adding Hakalaukunlenkki ja Hakalaukunpolku - Salpausselkä Trails MTB for distance, or using Siltapolku - Salpausselkä Trails MTB and Mörripolku toward Hollola’s marked bike trails(1). Koneharjun yhdysreitti - Salpausselkä trails MTB and Riihelän Rinki - Salpausselkä trails MTB connect near Likolammi if you want shorter link options. Päijät-Häme is known for ridge and lake scenery; Lahti is the regional hub, and this loop is the longest and most demanding of the city’s marked Salpausselkä Trails for riders(1). A separate Hollola “Suoreitti” network with wooden posts and yellow paint blazes is mentioned as an extension idea in the same area but is not the red-arrow Salpausselkä line(1).
This segment is part of Finnish national cycling route 10, the signed backbone that runs from Turku through Hämeenlinna and Lammi to Asikkala(1). Do not mix it up with the separate international EuroVelo 10 Baltic Sea circuit along Finland’s coast—this is the inland line listed on Polkupyöräwiki(1). The route is about 24 km point-to-point within Asikkala in Päijät-Häme between the Viitaila sports-field area and the Länsi-Asikkala school cluster, using the kind of quiet local roads and connectors typical for long-distance cycle touring in rural Häme. Near the start, Viitailan kaukalo and Viitailan nurmikenttä sit beside Hautiontie; further along you pass Länsi-Asikkalan koulun nurmikenttä, Länsi-Asikkalan koulun kaukalo and Länsi-Asikkalan koulun liikuntasali in the Hilliläntie area—handy landmarks for breaks even though they are school pitches rather than wilderness shelters. The main touring draw in Asikkala is linking onward: Visit Lahti’s local cycling pages highlight how Vääksy, the canal district and Pulkkilanharju fit into postcard rides such as the 27 km Vääksy–Pulkkilanharju loop on the Salpausselkä Geopark esker(2). From the same hub you can also stitch gravel and touring circuits around Vesijärvi and toward Lahti when you want a longer day(2). Where this line meets other networks, you can branch to Viitailan ladut and Kurhila-Hillilän ladut in winter, or in summer combine with Aurinko-Ilves vaellusreitti, Aurinkovuoren kesäreitit and Aurinkovuoren ladut near Aurinkovuori—those trails reach shelters such as Kivistön laavu and Kuurnamäen laavu that make strong coffee stops on a bike-and-hike holiday. National cycling route 4, which leaves Lahti toward Sysmä and the north, crosses the same Asikkala–Aurinkovuori outdoor network on its own alignment, so ambitious riders can plan multi-day hops between numbered routes. For closures, grooming on parallel ski tracks and paths the Municipality of Asikkala maintains, check the Municipality of Asikkala travel hub and its sports-facility map application(3).
Nuotiokehä. Savottapolku kulkee tämän kautta. Tien toisella puolella löytyy kaivo.
Ei jätehuoltoa.
Neljä ulkokuntoilulaitetta Gym park.

Tasainen maasto.

Paljon korkeuseroja. This course is rated #2 in the world. It is a AAA1 class frisbee golf course.

Tasainen maasto. Radalla on A- ja B-tiit, A-tiiltä on lyhyempi matka korille. Radan pituus 295 m/439 m.

Jonkin verran korkeuseroja. Myös talvikäytössä.

Tasainen maasto.

Tasainen maasto.

Tasainen rata, ei korkeuseroja.

Paljon korkeuseroja.



138 porrasta, pituus n. 65 m ja kokonaisnousu 18,5 m.
Puurakenteiset portaat. Lähtö jäähallin nurkalta uimahallille päin.
239 porrasta ja nousua noin 40 metriä. Portaat ovat valaistut ja toisella sivulla kaide koko matkalla. Portaiden ala- ja yläpäässä nuotiopaikat. Ylhäällä myös laavu ja näköalatasanne. Portaiden alapäässä hiihtomaa. Lähin parkkipaikka: Asikkalan liikuntahallin parkkipaikka, Asikkalantie 14.
Pituus tasanteineen on 120 metriä, askelmia 192 ja korkeuseroa 25 metriä.
164 askelmaa.
Portaat johdattavat Pasolanharjun ulkoilualueelle
Allasosastolla porealtaat, terapia-allas sekä kylmä-/kuumakävelyaltaat.
Discover the diverse landscapes of Päijänne Tavastia. From cultural sights to hidden natural gems.
Our core dataset is powered by official sources including Metsähallitus and LIPAS (the national database for sports facilities in Finland). We pull the latest GPX routes and location metadata directly from these authorities.
Note: Our database was last synced in 2026. While we strive for accuracy, always consult the official website which we display on each place or route or notices at the trail for safety-critical updates or seasonal closures.
No. Huts.fi is an independent Finnish platform. While we work with official open-data sets from organizations like Metsähallitus, we are a private entity.
Yes. Accessing our maps, trail data, and field information is currently free for all users.
We operate on a community-first model: we provide the platform, and our users help keep it accurate by sharing real-time updates (e.g., Is there firewood at the laavu? or Is the sand field dry enough to play?).
Our roadmap includes:
• Offline Maps: Downloadable trails for when you lose signal in the backwoods.
• Trail Navigation: Follow routes directly from your Phone or Watch.
• Live Safety Sharing: Real-time location sharing so friends and family know you're safe on the trail.