A map of 327 sports and nature sites in Kirkkonummi.
This wood-burning sauna can fit 6 - 8 persons. The shifts in this sauna are for 1,5 hours. It has a pier where you can go to swim. The sauna can be booked two weeks in advance on the website mentioned below. If you want to ask a sauna shift for the same day you need to call or visit the cafe (address: Läntinen Källvikintie 149, 02480 Kirkkonummi). Camping and docking in the area is possible for a small fee.
You can not use this sauna. IT IS NOT IN USE. But, it has become famous over social media & internationally. Basically it is an old sauna on concret pillars that has become slanted because of the ice. It has been called the crooked sauna or druken sauna.
This electric sauna is located in the area of Lähteelä. 10 persons can use the sauna at the same time. There is a pier to go to swim in the sea. Shifts are for an hour. The sauna can be booked two weeks in advance online (see the link below). For the same day inquiries you can call or visit the cafe (address: Läntinen Källvikintie 149, 02480 Kirkkonummi). Camping and docking a boat is possible in the area for a small fee.
A sauna that is manged by the Veikkola village association. If you are a member you get discounts but you can also just book a one time use of the sauna.
A private sauna at Sundet beach
The sheltered campfire in the island of Bylandet. There is firewood. There is a natural harbor with buoys. Camping is free and allowed in the island.
This is covered place where you can cook over a campfire.
This is a covered place where to cook over a campfire. Camping in the area is allowed only by the campfire sites, like this one, for up to 2 nights.
This is a sheltered campfire in the southermost tip of the island of Linlo.
This is a sheltered place where to cook with campfire.
This is a cooking shelter in the area of Lähteelä. Using the campfires is free but camping, using the saunas and docking in the area can be done by paying a fee. There is also a cafe in the area (address: Läntinen Källvikintie 149, 02480 Kirkkonummi)
The Siikajärvi–Korpinkierros connector is about 1.6 km in Nuuksio National Park, linking the Siikajärvi shoreline area on the Kirkkonummi side with the main Korpinkierros ring near Kolmoislammenranta in Espoo. Metsähallitus lists the route on Luontoon.fi(1). For how Kirkkonummi visitors reach the park from Siikaranta and Veikkola, the City of Kirkkonummi publishes short access notes on its Nuuksio page(2). Almost immediately after heading in from the Siikajärvi shore you reach Kolmoislammenranta varaustulentekopaikka, a bookable campfire site beside the lake—handy if you want a planned stop before joining the bigger ring. Dry toilets are available in the same shore area, which keeps longer day hikes practical. The terrain is short, easy forest path typical of Nuuksio lake shores and gentle ridges, with short duckboard sections possible where ground stays damp. At the Kolmoislammenranta junction you meet Korpinkierros, a long marked ring through forest lakes and rocky knolls, and the very short Yhdysreitti Siikaniemi - Korpinkierros link from the Siikaniemi parking side. Veikkola–Siikajärvi connector trail ties the Veikkola gate toward Siikajärvi, Soidinkierros Trail loops the Soidinsuo side from Siikaranta, and Haukkalampi pyöräilyreitti runs a separate biking line through the popular Haukkalampi shore area. Retkipaikka’s roundup of Nuuksio’s official trails notes that Korpinkierros is often started from Haukkalampi or from Siikaniemi at Kolmoislammenranta, where a short connector drops you onto the ring—exactly the role this yhdysreitti plays for walkers coming from Siikajärvi(3).
Kotokierros-route goes around several ponds. The route is marked with green colored signs. This trails goes around several small ponds (Korsolampi, Immerlammi, Kakarlammi, Kotolammi and Mustjärvi) The area in general is called Meiko. There is a designated camping area along this route. A nice drone view of <a href="https://youtu.be/WT80tiMxLQI?si=BQuRqcHVTZ6OG5U4">Meiko nature reserve</a>
For the shared Veikkola parking, tunnel under the Turku motorway, and how Kaarniaispolku is marked, start with the City of Kirkkonummi’s Kirkkonummiseikkailu Kaarniaispolku material(1) and Metsähallitus’ Kaarniaispolku page on Luontoon.fi(2). Veikkola–Siikajärvi connector trail is an easy point-to-point hiking link of about 4.9 km on our map through Kirkkonummi on the southern fringe of Nuuksio National Park. It starts from Veikkola luontopolun pysäköintialue—the same trailhead lot at the end of Soidentaantie used by Kaarniaispolku—passes through forest and joins the wider marked hiking network toward Lake Siikajärvi, finishing near Hotelli Nuuksio where you meet Soidinkierros. Along the way you can shorten or lengthen a day by tying in Kaarniaispolku’s loop from that parking or head out on Soidinkierros around the mire and lake shores. Retkipaikka’s Kaarniaispolku walk-through by Luontopolkumies adds on-the-ground detail: pinecone-marked posts, short bog boardwalks, rocky forest, and the famously lush regrowth over Veikkola’s old landfill before the path meets the broader hiking line toward Siikajärvi(3). Use Veikkola luontopolun pysäköintialue for a straightforward start; from the same corner you can step straight onto Kaarniaispolku if you want a shorter nature loop first. Nearing the north end of this connector, Hotelli Nuuksion frisbeegolfrata and Hotelli Nuuksio / Kuntosali sit beside the path—handy landmarks if you are meeting someone or combining sport with a forest walk. Where this line meets Yhdysreitti Siikajärvi - Korpinkierros, longer plans can continue toward Kolmoislammenranta varaustulentekopaikka and related facilities on that link. Dedicated YouTube searches did not surface a clip that clearly names only this 4.9 km connector; area footage usually features Kaarniaispolku, Soidinkierros, or the wider Nuuksio network instead.
Linlon reitti läntiselle keittokatokselle is a short point-to-point hiking connection of about 1.4 km on Linlo, Kirkkonummi’s maritime outdoor island in Uusimaa. It starts from the Linlon parkkipaikka and Linlon satama side: you cross the footbridge to the island, pass Linlon Esteetön tulipaikka almost immediately, and soon reach Linlon Pohjoinen keittokatos before continuing through shoreline forest to Linlon läntinen keittokatos at the west end. The trail is a useful link if you want a sheltered lunch spot on the quieter western shore without walking the full island circuit. For the latest services map, firewood policy, and harbour updates, start with the City of Kirkkonummi’s Linlon saari page(1). Luontoon.fi(2) publishes the island’s marked trail listings for trip planning alongside other municipal outdoor destinations. Day visitors often combine this western branch with other colour-marked paths on the island. Retkipaikka’s Luontopolkumies walk-through(3) describes the blue marked option that leads to the western cooking shelter after a little over a kilometre of walking, with stairs in places along the rocky shore and reed-fringed sections on the west coast; the same article notes the harbour footbridge was rebuilt in summer 2020 as a wide, barrier-free structure that is popular with anglers as well as hikers. If you still have time, Linlon reitti eteläiselle keittokatokselle branches toward the southern cooking shelter and lagoon-side stops from the same harbour area, and The shortcut of Linlo can shorten a loop toward the south. Kirkkonummi maintains firewood service at the island’s cooking shelters(1). UUVI(4) reminds visitors that dogs must be kept on a leash and that open fires belong in the designated cooking shelters. Kirkkonummi maintains the island. Uusimaa offers many similar sea-facing day hikes; this segment is one compact option when you already know you want the western keittokatos.
Stora Brändö hiking trail is about 2.6 km around the main island of Stora Brändö in Kirkkonummi, east of Porkkalanniemi in Uusimaa. The island is managed as a UUVI recreation area, and Uudenmaan virkistysalueyhdistys publishes the destination page with fire rules, dog policy, nesting-season access limits, and notes on how narrow and rocky the footpaths are(1). There is no scheduled boat service, so you need your own craft or a lift from someone else(2). Suomen Luonto describes the place as an easy short boat trip from Helsinki, Espoo, or Porkkala, with a walking loop of a few kilometres over glaciated rock and green forest, sunny slabs on one side of the island, and steep south shore cliffs where small children need a firm hand(2). Along the walk you pass through old spruce forest and a vivid mire section described on the official page as a jewel of the island(1). About 1.4 km into the circuit you reach Stora Brändön lintutorni on high rock; from the tower you can scan the southern bird conservation area and surrounding islets without landing there during the closed period(1). Near the start of the circuit, Stora Brändö Mooring Ring, Stora Brändö Kiinnitysrengas, and Stora Brändö Poiju give boaters places to tie up, while Stora Brändö Laituri marks the sheltered east bay with its concrete jetty. Melojien rantaumispaikka and Melojien rantautumispaikka are kayak landing spots on the west shore. For cooking and meals, Stora Brändön Keittokatos, Stora Brändö North Outdoor Grill, and Stora Brändön tulipaikka sit close together on the north–east side—fires are allowed only at built sites and never during a wildfire warning(1). Dry toilets are available in the main service cluster. If you arrive by paddle, the shoreline is also part of the Stora Brändo Kayking Route for a longer water-focused day. The travel blog Haaveena hyvä kuva has long treated Stora Brändö as a family favourite for grilling and slow island time, and still reminds readers to be extra careful around the bird reserve in the restricted season(3). Few large guest berths keep the atmosphere relatively quiet compared with busy guest harbours(2).
Linlo is a compact marine recreation island between Porkkalanniemi and Upinniemi. This hike is about 1.6 km one way from the harbour parking toward Linlon eteläinen keittokatos at the lagoon-like south shore, with Laguunin laituri, Laguunin grillimaja, and Laguunin kiinnityspoijut right beside the same cluster. Kirkkonummi is an easy day trip from the Helsinki area, and the island sits mostly inside the Natura 2000 network apart from its northern tip. For shelter names, firewood service at the municipal cooking shelters, the PDF guide map of shelters, and the guest harbour link, the City of Kirkkonummi Linlon saari page is the best official starting point(1). UUVI, the association for Uusimaa recreation areas, summarises island access, dogs-on-leash rules, berry and mushroom picking, and practical services from the marina onward(2). You cross the pedestrian bridge from Linlon satama and almost immediately pass Linlon Esteetön tulipaikka, the accessible campfire beside the bridge on the island side—UUVI notes the bridge and this campfire as accessible, while most other paths stay narrow, rocky, and stepped(2). A few hundred metres in, Linlon Pohjoinen keittokatos and the Linlo WC pair sit close together on the main approach. About 0.9 km out, the line reaches Linlon läntinen keittokatos on the west shore; the same kilometre also carries Linlon reitti läntiselle keittokatokselle and connects to The shortcut of Linlo if you want a shorter loop variant back toward the lagoon. From there the path continues south toward the water and the sheltered “lagoon” corner where Linlon eteläinen keittokatos, Laguunin grillimaja, and Laguunin laituri give you table space, a meal by the water, and a seasonally popular birdwatching outlook toward nearby islets(3). Colour-painted municipal trails crisscross the island; Retkipaikka’s updated walking notes tie the red-marked line to the southern cooking shelter and south-tip views—helpful if you want to match ground markings with the shelter names on our map(3). Outdoor Family’s Linlo article stresses steep west-shore cliffs and small caves—worth knowing if you walk with children near the western keittokatos(4). Dry toilets sit near several nodes; see our pages for Linlo WC, Linlon WC, Laguunin WC, and the official notices on site for opening hours.
Vetokannas trail is about 1.9 km as a point-to-point hiking line through the northwest part of Porkkalanniemi in Kirkkonummi, on a headland where forest meets the Gulf of Finland. For the three marked routes and shared services in the area, start from the Porkkalanniemi routes material on Luontoon.fi(1). The City of Kirkkonummi lists the Vetokannas trail together with Telegrafberget and Pampskatan, parking addresses, red waymarking, and notes that the route itself is not barrier-free(2). Uudenmaan virkistysalueyhdistys describes how Vetokannaksen taival sits in the quieter northwest of the peninsula, how the marked backbone routes help limit wear, and that dogs must stay on leash in the area(3). Metsähallitus has reported a renewed roughly five-kilometre marked network linking multiple cooking shelters and fire sites across Porkkalanniemi, with joint planning across Metsähallitus, Kirkkonummi, Helsinki, Vantaa, Nurmijärvi, and Uuvi(5). Between the northern Vetokannaksen parkkipaikka and the Haahkan–Lokki area at the south you pass named rest points Tiira, Koskelo, and Lokki with Keittokatos Tiira, Keittokatos Koskelo, Keittokatos Lokki, Tulipaikka Haahka, and tent camping zones beside several of them—good places to cook, picnic, or break up a short hike. Dry toilets are available at the service clusters; rocky shore sections open westward sea views. The terrain mixes sandier track, forest path, and rocky ground; footwear with grip helps on wet rock. Bronze Age burial cairns appear beside the path and are called out in local descriptions(2)(4). Near the route you can link to Teleberget Loop where yellow marks meet red, and Pampskatanin pisto branches toward the southern tip of the peninsula. Retkipaikka columnist Mika Markkanen (“Luontopolkumies”) walked the line in spring 2024, timing about an hour for the leg and praising red diamond marks, sea-facing rock perches, and the cairns—while noting one briefly sparser marking spot and slippery wet rock in spring(4). Kirkkonummi lies in Uusimaa. The plain city and region names appear here so internal links attach to clean mentions, separate from organization names above.
The Teleberget Loop is a short coastal hike on the Porkkala peninsula in Kirkkonummi, Uusimaa. The trail is about 2.3 km as a loop over rocky shores and pine woods, with the highest views from Telegrafberget toward the sea. Metsähallitus describes the signed route network together with Vetokannaksen taival and Pampskatanin pisto on the Porkkalanniemi routes page on Luontoon.fi(1). The City of Kirkkonummi(2) highlights Telegrafberget for sea views and birdwatching at Pampskatan, and points to the same Luontoon.fi route hub for maps. Uudenmaan virkistysalueyhdistys(4) summarises the three main marked trails on the peninsula, including the loop to the panoramic hill. Luontopolkumies on Retkipaikka(3) walked the yellow-marked loop after Pampskatan and notes moderate ups and downs on rock, occasional slippery frost on the stone, and a short stretch where markings are sparse near the top of Telegrafberget—worth watching for the next wider path downhill. The loop ties together several rest areas that also appear on Vetokannaksen taival and Pampskatanin pisto. Near the south, Keittokatos Merikotka and the Merikotka campfire and tent spots sit close to the shore; a little farther along the ring, Haahkan parkkipaikka gives access to Tulipaikka Haahka, Tulipaikka Haahkan teltta-alue, and the barrier-free viewing route Haahkan katselulavan esteetön tie to a seaside viewing platform. Around one kilometre into the circuit, Lokki - keittokatos and Keittokatos Lokki offer a sheltered cooking spot above the rocks, with Keittokatos Koskelo and Koskelon parkkipaikka a bit farther along the north side. Porkkalanniemen parkkipaikka and Hirviniityn WC serve the central car park off Omsatuntie; Pysäköintialue, Porkkalanportti and Porkkalanportin parkkipaikka sit by Tullandintie for approaches from the gate area. Toward the west, Tulipaikka Telkkä, Keittokatos Telkkä, and Pampskatanin parkkipaikka cluster before the path climbs onto Telegrafberget. Dry toilets are placed near the main shelters and parking areas. You can combine this loop with Vetokannaksen taival for a longer day along the headland or drop onto Pampskatanin pisto toward the southern tip; the marked trails share short common sections(3). Kirkkonummi lists parking along Dragetintie, Tullandintie, Omsatuntie, and Källvikintie for the wider Porkkalanniemi area(2).


A out door grill / area to cook food and have a picnic on the island of Stora Brändö. Which is a favorite place to boat or kayak to.
Stora Herrö sijaitsee Espoon ja Kirkkonummen rajalla pentalan eteläpuolella. Osa saaren maa-alueista on yksityisiä. Telttailu on sallittu. Saarella on vuokrasauna, keittokatoksia, polttopuita, puucee, tulentekopaikkoja, näköalatorni sekä kiinnittymispoijuja että saaristoliikennelaituri säännöllisillä reittiyhteyksillä kesäkaudella.
This is a campfire site. There is also a covered campfire site nearby.
This is a campfire spot by the lake Meiko along the Meikonkierros trail.
Keittokatos, jossa neljä tulipaikkaa+ puuvaja, puucee
Keittokatos + puuvaja, puucee


Yksityinen rata, mutta kaikkien pelattavissa. Kiekkoja voi vuokrata hotellilta.
Paljon korkeuseroja.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja. Radalta löytyy vaihtoehtoiset heittopaikat lapsille ja aloittelijoille.
Puisissa portaissa nousua 20,5 m, pituus 63 m.
Puiset portaat, korkeusero 26 m, 158 porrasta.
Kuntouima-altaan lisäksi 2 poreallasta, kylmäallas ja kylmä- ja kuumakahluualtaat.
Radat 150 m (2 kpl) ja 300 m.
Radat 75 m ja 100 m.
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Kirkkonummi.
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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.
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