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Tampere
Nation / PlaceFI

Tampere

Finland's second city and second-ranked data-centre siting location, offering a larger talent pool than Kajaani.

Last refreshed: 6 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

What does Tampere offer that Kajaani doesn't for hyperscale data-centre operators?

Timeline for Tampere

#26 May

Ranked jointly first with Kajaani in May 2026 greenfield location analysis

Data Centres: Boom and Backlash: Where the next data centres should go
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Common Questions
Why is Tampere Finland being considered for data-centre investment?
Tampere ranks as one of Finland's top data-centre locations for 2026, offering Fingrid's fast grid connections, sub-0.10 water stress, 8,000+ free-cooling hours, and a larger engineering talent pool than the more remote Kajaani.Source: Fortum / briefing analysis
Where is Tampere Finland?
Tampere is Finland's second-largest city, with about 240,000 people in the urban area, located approximately 180 km north of Helsinki in the Pirkanmaa region.
What companies have data centres in Tampere Finland?
Tampere is home to several data-centre operators drawn by Fingrid's fast connections, sub-0.10 WRI water stress, and over 8,000 free-cooling hours per year. Its larger talent pool compared to more remote Kajaani makes it attractive for facilities needing on-site technical staff.Source: Fortum / briefing analysis
Is Tampere Finland a good place to build a data centre?
Tampere ranked alongside Kajaani as Finland's top data-centre city in the May 2026 global siting analysis, scoring highly on fast Fingrid grid connections, free cooling (8,000+ hours/year), near-zero water stress, and a renewable electricity surplus from Nordic hydropower and wind.Source: Lowdown data-centres briefing

Background

Tampere ranks alongside Kajaani as one of Finland's two leading data-centre siting destinations. Finland overall leads the global shortlist for new large data-centre campuses in 2026: Fingrid offers fast grid connections, WRI Aqueduct rates Finnish baseline water stress at under 0.10, and the Nordic climate provides more than 8,000 free-cooling hours per year. Where Kajaani offers the lowest operational cost and maximum free-cooling, Tampere offers a larger engineering talent poolFinland's second-largest city and its second university hub — making it more competitive for facilities requiring on-site hyperscale operations staff.

Tampere is Finland's second-largest city with approximately 240,000 people in the urban area, located about 180 km north of Helsinki in the Pirkanmaa region. It has historically been a heavy-industry and manufacturing centre (textiles, machinery), with a large share of brownfield industrial land now available for repurposing. Its universities — Tampere University and Tampere University of Applied Sciences — produce engineering and computer science graduates that support data-centre workforce needs.

The Finnish regulatory environment is broadly favourable for data-centre development: environmental permits are predictable, the planning process is faster than in the UK or most of Northern Virginia's current framework, and there is no equivalent of the moratorium-bill wave affecting the US. The primary constraints remain rural transmission upgrades and the talent pool relative to Kajaani's more remote setting.

Source Material