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How Helsinki became a world reference for road safety

Helsinki became a global road-safety benchmark by making streets safer with consistently lower speeds—especially 30 km/h—upgraded infrastructure for pedestrians and cyclists, and data-driven targeting backed by enforcement.

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Marcus Kay

INTERMEDIATE
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How Helsinki became a world reference for road safety

Helsinki’s rise as a road-safety reference is closely tied to a steady, citywide shift toward safer speeds and a “system” approach that treats crash prevention as an engineering-and-enforcement problem, not just an individual behavior issue. A central step has been the expansion of 30 km/h speed limits on a large share of streets, including around schools, because speed reductions significantly lower both the likelihood of crashes and the severity when collisions happen.

But speed is only one part of the strategy. Helsinki has also invested in street redesign—such as safer crossings, improved lighting, and infrastructure that better protects walking and cycling—while improving coordination with traffic police to keep driving behavior aligned with the limits.

The city uses crash and speed data, along with feedback, to identify dangerous road segments and “black spots,” then prioritizes fixes where the risk is highest. To make speed management effective, Helsinki relies on enforcement support too, including fixed control points (speed-camera enforcement) operating in areas where higher speeds had historically produced more dangerous outcomes.

Finally, the approach is connected to broader long-term planning and Vision Zero/Safe System principles: make streets safer for people, design for human error, and build layers of protection so that if something goes wrong, the impact is reduced. Over time, the combination of lowered speeds, safer street environments, and targeted enforcement helped Helsinki reach a level of traffic fatalities that stands out internationally.

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