A map of 279 sports and nature sites in Hyvinkää.

Lean -to campfire and table group. The wooden canopy and the wooden canopy are located on the nearby forest road about 130 m east. The firewood is chopped. There is no winter maintenance in the area. There is a pier on the shore of Kiiskilampi.
Ylläpitäjä Tahkon veteraanit. Hiihtokaudella tammi-helmikuussa Lehtolan maja on avoinna lauantaisin ja sunnuntaisin klo 10-15 ja hiihtolomalla joka päivä.
Kaksoislammet laavu. Lean -to campfire and table group. Wooden and wooden canopy about 120 m west, along the forest road. The firewood is chopped. The shores of the pond lead to boardwalks. Maintenance of the area is not done during the ski season.
Lean -to campfire and table group. Wooden and wooden canopy along the road and the pier by the pond. The firewood is chopped pre -chopped. There is no winter maintenance in the area. The resting place is located in the nature reserve.
Ylläpitäjä Hyvinkään Latu. Kanttiini on auki hiihtokaudella lauantaina ja sunnuntaina klo 10-15.

The Vantaa River nature trail is about 1.7 km in Hyvinkää along the Vantaa River in a rural cultural landscape. Check the City of Hyvinkää nature trails page first: as of February 2026 the city lists this trail as temporarily out of service, so confirm current access before you travel(1). When the route is open, UUVI’s destination page summarises services and rules at the river crossing: parking, an infoboard, yellow markings in the terrain, and a campfire spot maintained near the Hyria campus at the start(2). Retkipaikka’s Luontopolkumies walk report from summer 2023 adds practical colour—crossing the river on the pontoon bridge, narrow riverside strips with nettles in high summer, pasture cattle across the fence, and interpretation boards on fish, bats, grazing, and local history(3). The walk begins from the Hyria vocational campus on Uudenmaankatu. Vantaanjoen parkkipaikka and Vantaanjoen parking bookend the early part of the route beside Hyrian Uudenmaankadun liikuntasali, so you can pick whichever bay is easiest. A rest spot and campfire sit near the buildings at the trailhead. After the river crossing, the path follows the bank, then swings through a short wooded loop before returning along the riverside; total height change is small but tread can be soft when wet(2)(3). About 0.9 km from the start you pass Hyvinkäänkylä school grounds: Hyvinkäänkylän koulun ulkokuntoilupaikka, Hyvinkäänkylän koulun pallokenttä, Hyvinkäänkylän koulun lähiliikuntapaikka, Hyvinkäänkylän koulun luistelukenttä, and Hyvinkäänkylän koulun liikuntasali sit along Uudenmaankatu without pulling you away from the river corridor. Veikkarinpuiston hiekkakenttä marks the approximate north end before you head back. Roughly 0.8 km along, the same corridor meets Nikinharjun ulkoilureitti, Nikinharjun maastopyöräilylenkki, and Nikinharjun lenkki—the city’s running, mountain-biking, and ski circuits around Nikinharju—so you can extend a short outing into a longer workout on shared parking and paths if conditions allow(1). Fires are allowed only at the designated pit; dogs must be on a leash(2). The route is not barrier-free: sections are narrow and rooty and can feel spongy after rain(2). The trail is in Hyvinkää in Uusimaa.
Usmi Black Stone Circuit is about a 10.9 km marked hike in Hyvinkää’s Kytäjä–Usmi outdoor area in Uusimaa. It follows the same famous “Black Stone” network—named for the durable Hyvinkään Musta bedrock once quarried here—that the City of Hyvinkää describes for Mustan kiven kierros(1). Hyvinkää is the maintaining authority; trail updates, safety rules, and service times for Latu-Miilun maja appear on those pages(1). Hyvinkää lies west of the Helsinki–Tampere motorway; the Kytäjä–Usmi Natura landscape mixes river meadows, paddocks, forested gorges, and rocky clearings, and the Kytäjä–Usmi visitor portal lists direct links to every official circuit in the area(2). From the northern part of the circuit toward Latu-Miilun maja you climb well over 50 m from the Paalijoki gorge toward the twin ponds, so legs and footwear matter. Around 5 km in, Kaksoslammien laavu sits between the ponds with a fireplace ring and, per the city text, a lean-to and dry toilet for an overnight stop planned with care(1). A little farther south, Iso-karhun Outdoor Grill and Iso-Karhun nuotiopaikka cluster on the rocky ground above Iso-Karhu pond—another fully equipped pause with shelters, woodsheds, tables, and benches in the city’s description(1). The terrain there is intentionally rugged: Retkipaikka’s spring report shows how the old monument-stone quarry opens above the water and how slick rock and wet hollows can surprise you if boots are too light(3). Completing the ring returns you past forest tracks toward the Hyyppärä polo field and riding-school meadows; early and late segments share paths with horseback traffic, so give horses space and stick to calm passing as the city requires(1). Several other marked routes braid through the same shelters—you can extend a day by linking Mustan kiven kierros or Kolmen lammen kierros from the shared nuotiopaikat and laavu if you still have energy when you reach Kaksoslammien laavu.
Niittulahti Circuit is a long, easy forest-road day hike in the Kytäjä-Usmi outdoor area in Hyvinkää, Uusimaa. The trail is about 9.3 km on our map; the City of Hyvinkää describes the full Jaanankallio circuit at about 10.2 km, so published figures vary slightly with rounding and track choice(1). For closures, fire rules, the recommended clockwise direction, and exact coordinates for the Suolijärvi shore fireplace, start with the City of Hyvinkää trail page(1). The Kytäjä-Usmi outdoor area route list groups this circuit with the other named Kytäjä-Usmi hikes and mountain-bike options if you are planning a longer stay(2). You start and finish at Jaanankallio parking on Kytäjäntie 625. Almost the whole distance follows small forest roads; the city notes a short, wet and stony tractor-lane section south of Iso-Haiskari, and vehicle traffic can still occur on Suolijärventie behind barriers, so treat road stretches like real roads(1). About a quarter of a kilometre from the start you pass Niittulahden nuotiopaikka, and roughly halfway around the lake you reach the Suolijärvi shore rest area: a fireplace and dock where swimming and recreational fishing are possible in season, with a dry toilet and wood shelter on the forest road roughly 300 m from the shore(1). The last stretch down to the water is steep; a rope handrail helps on the rockier steps, and the city asks for extra care when the rock is wet(1). Further along the circuit, Iso-Haiskarin laavu sits where this route meets the shorter Haiskarin kierros—useful if you want a lean-to break with a table, dry toilet, and small dock by Iso-Haiskari pond(1). The route crosses varied forest and edges several protected patches with stream-side groves, small lake shores, and rocky outcrops; birdlife can be rewarding in the right season(1). The beginning and end overlap Haiskarin kierros, and the same trailhead links you into Kytömetsän pyörähdys and Kahden piilon kierros if you want to stitch a longer day from the same carpark(2). Retkitassut’s walk on Niittulahden kierros is blunt about the scenery: long stretches on forest roads and visible forestry work, with a fair bit of solitude on a wet autumn day(3). Kävelystä ja elämästä describes the same R2-marked line on area maps, the rope on the steepest descent to the lake, and how signposts occasionally needed a careful look in the field—worth reading if you want another hiker’s sense of pace and wayfinding(4).
Hyvinkää health forest trail is about 2,4 km of easy-to-moderate walking through the Tehtaansuo mire and old-growth patches barely ten minutes from the city centre in Uusimaa. The City of Hyvinkää opened Terveysmetsä after a preceding health-forest study that shaped the path layout and wellness programming; the same pages place the area at Jousikatu 3, roughly 800 m from the Willa shopping centre, on a 52-hectare near-natural wetland block, and suggest allowing about an hour on foot(1). For closures, map downloads, and up-to-date details, treat the municipality as the primary channel. You start from the Kankuri end of the street grid: Kankurin parkkiapaikka sits beside the Onse-areena and Torikadun liikuntakeskuksen tennishalli cluster, with Kankurin liikuntapuiston hiekkakenttä, Kankurin liikuntapuiston jalkapallokenttä, Kankurin liikuntapuiston tekonurmikenttä, and Kankurin liikuntapuiston luistelukenttä a few metres away. After only a few hundred metres the line brushes Tapainlinnan koulun liikuntasali, Tapainlinnan koulun pallokenttä, and Tapainlinnan koulun lähiliikuntapaikka. Most of the distance crosses duckboards and forest footpaths above the soggy ground, then rocky moraine knolls and a small pond before you return toward Kankurin ulkokuntoilupaikka, Kankurin skeittiparkki, and Kankurin liikuntapuiston jousiammuntarata. The first roughly 750–800 m are built as an accessible route on wide gravel and pier-like timber decking so wheelchair users can share the opening section(1)(3). Beyond that junction the longer option continues on duckboards and earthy tread; Retkipaikka’s walk-through notes orange for the accessible variant and yellow for the full route on the city map, spruce-shaped arrow posts beside the path, stream bridges, benches partway along, and low De Geer moraine humps rising from the mire(2). Helsingin Sanomat described eight birdhouse-shaped information points for sensory exercises along the finished 2,4 km trail at the 2019 opening(4). The trail sits in the same built-up outdoor fabric as Tehtaansuon oikaisu and Eteläinen yhdyslatu, which reuse Tapainlinnan koulun lähiliikuntapaikka and Kankurin parkkiapaikka, while Lehtolan lenkki, Hyvinkään pyörähdys, and Itäinen yhdyslatu fan out nearby for cyclists and skiers who want a longer city network day. Before you travel, confirm seasonal tips and any route changes on the City of Hyvinkää pages(1).
Suomiehen luontopolku (Suomies Nature Trail), starting at Jukka Forest Road, offers 2.5-3 km of easy-medium trails through a human-shaped environment, highlighting traces of gravel extraction, restoration, and Ice Age signs.
For closures, forest-fire rules, and the step-by-step route narrative, start with hyvinkaa.fi(1). The Kytäjä–Usmi(4) area page frames the wider trail network and nature values. Retkipaikka’s Luontopolkumies walkthrough adds practical notes on markings, wet sections, and where the path shares forest roads with other routes(2). Toisiin maisemiin describes the Piilolammi lookout rope descent, mixed blue and yellow markings there, and how easy it is to miss turn-offs when forest roads double as winter ski corridors(3). The trail is about 7.1 km as one continuous line on our map. The City of Hyvinkää publishes a longer figure of about 9.8 km for the full marked circuit beginning and ending at Usmin beach parking, including road links and the classic three-lake loop through Piilolammi, Iso-Kypärä, and Kaksoislammit(1). The route is classed as demanding: rocky, rooty forest paths, wet hollows and mire, and noticeable ups and downs, with a rope on the steepest climb to the Piilolammi viewpoint(1)(2)(3). Marking is mainly blue paint on wooden posts; near Piilolammi, yellow markings appear briefly where the path drops toward the shore(2)(3). From the Usmin end of the circuit you are close to Usmin uimaranta and Usminjärven talviuintipaikka. Early along the line, Piilolammi Uimalaituri, Usmi Piilolammi laituri, Piilolammi Tulipaikka, and Piilolammin Tulipaikka cluster around Piilolammi—good for a swim stop or a short detour onto Piilolammin luontopolku. About 1 km in, Iso-Kypärän laavu sits above Iso-Kypärä; farther on, Latu-Miilun maja and Kaksoslammien laavu bracket the twin-lake area, with Iso-karhun Outdoor Grill and Iso-Karhun nuotiopaikka nearby on shared tread with biking routes. Dry toilets sit near Piilolammi (Usmi Piilolammi kuivakäymälä). Piilolammi parkkipaikka offers parking partway round if you approach from that side. The circuit shares junctions with Kahden piilon kierros, Kytömetsän pyörähdys, Kypärän lenkki, Kiiskilammen takalenkki, Karhujen pyörähdys, Usmin lenkki, and longer hikes such as Mustan kiven kierros and Seitsemän veljeksen vaellusreitti; near the finish, Vaskivuoren luontopolku branches toward the beach. Hyvinkää in Kanta-Häme is a straightforward base for day hiking in the Kytäjä–Usmi forests.
The Seven Brothers hiking trail (Seitsemän veljeksen vaellusreitti) is a long literary route inspired by Aleksis Kivi, running from the Aleksis Kivi statue in Helsinki to Hyvinkää’s Sveitsi area—about 90 km in total. This listing covers the Hyvinkää section only: the trail is about 20.2 km on our map (the city describes the same leg as roughly 19.8 km)(1). For current maps, safety notes, and the full step-by-step description of terrain from the Kytäjä–Usmi forests to Sveitsi, start with the City of Hyvinkää’s trail page(1). The Municipality of Nurmijärvi publishes the preceding leg south of the municipal border, including access from Palojoki and Herusten(2). The free Nomadi mobile guide (Citynomadi) pairs with the route: the Finnish Association for Nature Conservation’s Nurmijärvi article explains that the app offers GPS guidance and roughly 150 info points on nature, culture, and services along the wider trail(3). On the Hyvinkää leg, the trail begins in the busy Sveitsi outdoor and sports area—near fitness stairs, pools, and other facilities—then soon leaves roads behind for forest paths, mires, and rocky ridges. Where the route overlaps the short Sveitsin luontopolku loop, you can tack on that 2.1 km nature trail for a gentler local walk before committing to the longer haul. After the northern suburbs, the route crosses open countryside and enters Petkelsuo’s raised bog fringe on duckboards, then climbs toward Hopeavuori and the Kytäjä–Usmi woodlands. Mid-route, Latu-Miilun maja marks a ski-club cabin setting before the Kaksoslammien laavu and Iso-Karhun nuotiopaikka pair: lean-to, campfire ring, dry toilet, and table seating overlooking small forest lakes—good lunch stops in fair weather(1). Usmin uimaranta and the winter swimming spot on Usminjärvi sit just off the path; the city text describes Natura forest, old quarries, and the dramatic Paarijoki canyon crossing with a narrow wooden bridge before the trail climbs toward the Vantaa River and passes under the motorway on the final approach back to Sveitsi(1). The city rates this section as demanding because of steep hills, uneven and stony ground, and occasional wet hollows; Kytäjäntie and other road crossings need care(1). In high spring flow, the Paalijoki bridge can flood—the safe detour runs via Ladun maja and Usmintie toward the Vantaa bridge(1). For a candid account of weekend crowds at the lean-tos, marking quirks near Sveitsi, and wayfinding between junctions, Erämaahan’s Hyvinkää trip write-up is worth reading(4). Uusimaa is Finland’s southernmost region of dense towns and forests; Hyvinkää sits inland. In Nurmijärvi, the next leg is listed as Seitsemän veljeksen vaellusreitti Nurmijarvi on our site when you are ready to continue south.
K-18 MTB-oikaisu is a very short point-to-point mountain-bike connector—about 1 km on our map—in the Kytäjä–Usmi recreation forests west of Hyvinkää. It threads the same forest-road and path mesh as the city’s three signposted MTB loops (Karhujen, Kytömetsän, and Hyvinkään pyörähdys), so it works best as a cut-through when you are linking those circuits or approaching lakeside rest spots instead of riding the longer way around(1). The line sits in the Natura 2000 woodland between the Iso-Karhun campfire cluster and Kaksoslammien laavu, then carries on toward Latu-Miilun maja at the northern end: you pass the Kaksoslammet lean-to a few hundred metres after the start of this segment, and the ski-club cabin setting at Latu-Miilun maja sits just past the mapped finish—handy for combining with Karhujen pyörähdys, Kolmen lammen kierros on foot, or the Usmi ski loop in winter. City materials do not give this exact connector its own trail page; for how the wider MTB network is marked and managed, start from the City of Hyvinkää’s mountain-biking hub and the Karhujen pyörähdys trail page, which describe bear-on-blue waymarks, counter-clockwise looping, gravel-leaning surfaces, and parking at Usmi beach(1)(2). The same network is mirrored on Luontoon.fi for map browsing(4). The Kytäjä–Usmi outdoor area overview lists roughly 27 km of maintained MTB lines and the mix of lean-tos, dry toilets, and firewood policy across the wider trail system—expect similar etiquette on connectors(3). Experienced riders threading a longer tour through Usmi often stage from Hyvinkää station or Sveitsi, roll toward Iso-Karhu, and shape loops toward Kiiskilampi or Petkelsuo; one detailed Jälki.fi write-up notes varied forest path with short technical pitches near Iso-Karhu before continuing toward Kiiskilampi and Kaksoslammet—useful pacing context for how this terrain feels even on a kilometre-long link(5). For fat bikes, e-MTBs, or gravel rigs without your own transport, Sveitsi Rent at Hyvinkää’s Sveitsi sports cluster takes online bookings and highlights the area’s ride network(6). Hyvinkää lies in Uusimaa inland from Helsinki; treat this connector like any other forest tyre track—yield to hikers where tread is shared, carry out litter, and confirm campfire rules when warnings apply(3).
Pikkupässi cycling route from Hyvinkää to Karkkila
For downloadable GPX, recommended counter-clockwise riding, and a surface-by-surface breakdown, start with the City of Hyvinkää’s Karhujen pyörähdys trail page(1). The Kytäjä–Usmi mountain biking overview on the same municipal site explains how Karhujen pyörähdys, Kytömetsän pyörähdys, and Kytäjän pyörähdys form a linked trio of marked loops you can combine for longer days(2). Metsähallitus also mirrors the route on Luontoon.fi for map browsing(3). The trail is about 10.1 km as a single forest-and-road loop around the Usmi shore area. Published municipal materials describe the “three bears” circuit at roughly 11 km with about 114 m of ascent and an easy gravel-style character on public roads plus forest roads(1); use 10.1 km here for GPS alignment. Hyvinkää sits in Uusimaa, with most of the riding in the Kytäjä–Usmi recreation forests. From the Usmi beach end, you soon work along the lake margin: Usmin uimaranta and the Usminjärven talviuintipaikka make easy orientation points if you arrive by car and walk down to the water. About 1 km into the loop, Iso-Karhun nuotiopaikka and the Iso-karhun Outdoor Grill cluster offer benches, a campfire ring, and a shore-side micro-stop; Kaksoslammien laavu and Iso-Kypärän laavu bookend the twin-pond corner a little earlier, with table groups and lean-to shelter space for a longer lunch. Dry toilets sit near several of these service points—handy on a family outing. Beyond the ponds, a couple of kilometres of paved road aim toward the Hyyppärä riding yards, then narrow forest tracks and wider gravel cut through mixed woodland. Hyvinkään Ratsastuskeskuksen maneesi, Jokirannan ratsastuskoulun maneesi Hyvinkää, Stable Nova / maneesi, and Hyyppärän ratsastusmaneesi all sit within a few hundred metres of the line—expect horses, yard traffic, and occasional surface grit near those yards. About 8.7 km from the start, Latu-Miilun maja marks the Latu-Miilu skiing association cabin; winter weekends sometimes bring a small café rhythm, while summer riders use it mainly as a waypoint toward the lake. Two thirds of the loop overlaps corridors that also belong to the longer Kytäjä circuit, so junctions to Kytömetsän pyörähdys and to walking variants such as Kolmen lammen kierros appear along the eastern segments(1)(2). If you want a regional gravel menu beyond the three signed bear-themed loops, the City of Hyvinkää also promotes Hyvinkään pyörähdys “Plus” as a longer city-and-forest combination that deliberately needs a map or GPS in the urban fringe(2). After the ride, seasonal kiosks at Usmin shore sometimes sell ice cream—worth checking if the summer café is open(1).
Nuotiopaikka, puuvaja ja laituri. Esteetön tulipaikka
Nuotiokehä ja penkkiryhmä. Puuvaja louhostien varressa n. 80 m länteen. Polttopuut pilkottuja. Lammen rannassa pitkospuut sammutusveden noutoa varten.
Nuotiokehä ja laituri. Puucee ja puukatos sijaitsevat läheisen metsätien varressa n. 220 m kaakkoon. Polttopuut on pilkottu valmiiksi. Alueella ei ole talviaikaista huoltoa. Alueella on tilaa muutamalle teltalle.
Leikkipuiston läheisyydessä.
Uimapaikka
Tasainen metsärata. Kilpapelaajille haasteita tarjoavalla Nummenmäen radalla on pitkiä ja kapeita metsärännejä. Radan par 70 heittoa.
Tasainen maasto.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Tasainen maasto.
Valaistus. Ei talvikunnossapitoa. Nastarikielto silloin, kun lumi tai jää eivät suojaa puurappusia.
Pistoolirata 25 m, 60 kpl sekä kiväärirata 150 m, 10 kpl.
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Hyvinkää.
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?).
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