Finnila's Finnish Baths: Difference between revisions
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==Awards and recognition== |
==Awards and recognition== |
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Still shortly before closing its popular Market Street location in San Francisco in the 1980s, Finnila's Finnish Baths was awarded the title "The Best" two times in row by the popular bi-weekly and free [[San Francisco Bay Area]] entertainment magazine ''[[San Francisco Bay Guardian]]''. According to the paper, Finnila's was "The Best Sauna and Massage Parlor" in the San Francisco Bay Area. <ref name=Best>''San Francisco Bay Guardian'' - N:o 37, 1984.</ref> |
Still shortly before closing its popular Market Street location in San Francisco in the 1980s, Finnila's Finnish Baths was awarded the title "The Best" two times in row by the popular bi-weekly and free [[San Francisco Bay Area]] entertainment magazine ''[[San Francisco Bay Guardian]]''. According to the paper, Finnila's was "The Best Sauna and Massage Parlor" in the San Francisco Bay Area. <ref name=Best>''San Francisco Bay Guardian'' - N:o 37, 1984.</ref><ref name=award>[http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=3344995745152&set=a.1394535384862.2057944.1276526789&type=3&theater A picture of the 1984 "The Best" award certificate granted to Finnila's by Bay Guardian]</ref> |
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* 1983 - "The Best Sauna and Massage Parlor". <ref name=Best/> |
* 1983 - "The Best Sauna and Massage Parlor". <ref name=Best/> |
Revision as of 17:38, 7 May 2013
Finnila's Finnish Baths - a.k.a. Finnila's - was a Finnish bathhouse and a health club in San Francisco, California in USA. It served the general public from circa 1910 to September, 2000. For approximately seven and a half first decades of its existence, Finnila's was located in the Castro District of San Francisco.[1][2]
Migration from Finland
In 1902, Matti Finnila (Finnish spelling: Finnilä), the future founder of Finnila's Finnish Baths, immigrated from Kalajoki, Finland to Los Angeles, California. In Los Angeles, Matti Finnila learned the skill of bricklaying. In 1906, the San Francisco earthquake inspired Matti Finnila to move to San Francisco, to help rebuild the city.[3]
In San Francisco, Matti Finnila met Alexandra (Sandra) Lantta from Ullava, Finland. The couple married and settled to live in the San Francisco's heavily Finnish-populated Castro District. Matti Finnila established a bricklaying business and in the early 1910s opened a Finnish-style sauna club, Finnila's Finnish Baths, for the general public.
Four locations of Finnila's in San Francisco
1. The first sauna of the Finnila family in San Francisco at 9 Douglas Street became a local attraction in the early 1910s. The sauna was built in the basement of the small wood-structured Victorian building, which the Finnilas owned and where they lived. At the start, the sauna was used mainly by the Finnila family, friends and neighbors. However, the word spread, and soon the Finnilas began accepting paying customers from the general public. Next, due to popular demand, the Finnila family decided to expand the bathhouse business and to move to a larger space and in more central location.
2. Finnila's opened a new bathhouse - Finnila's Finnish Baths - at 4032 17th Street in 1919, a half block west from the busy Castro Street. The Finnila family owned the entire 3-4 floor building, where the sauna facilities were built in the basement. There were two large traditional Finnish-style sauna-bathing rooms, one for women and another one for men. Both the women's and the men's sauna could accommodate about a dozen customers at a time. Throwing water on the hot rocks provided the hot steam for the baths. There were large shower and dressing rooms separately for the ladies and for the men. There were also separate women's and men's massage rooms, also in the basement of the building. At busy times, additional rooms from the upper floor were used to accommodate the massage customers.
3. The popularity of the Finnila's services prompted the Finnila family to expand the business even further. Next, Matti Finnila's son Alfred Finnila designed and constructed a large new Finnila's Finnish Baths bathhouse building on the busy Market Street, at the corner of Noe Street. The new bathhouse at 2284 Market Street had large women's and men's public saunas, accessible from the lobby area, and smaller private saunas, accessible from labyrinth-style long hallways. There was also a large privates sauna - sauna No. 21 -, known as "family sauna". Every morning c. 6 am, natural gas fires were lit on burners on the hallways, each burner throwing a powerful flame into a pipeline which led underneath the hot rocks of a sauna. This design and method used for the heating of the saunas was unique.
In the mid-1980s, the popular Finnila's Market Street bathhouse provided employment to a total of c. 65 employees, most of whom worked part-time. About 40 of these people were masseuses and masseurs, who each worked anywhere between one to five work shifts per week. The bathhouse was open daily from 10 am to 11 pm (Sundays, 8 am to 2 pm), providing both day- and night-shifts for its employees.
Despite of public outcry and attempts to prevent the closing down of the popular Finnila's Market Street bathhouse, the old bathhouse building was demolished by the owners, Alfred Finnila and his sister Edna Jeffrey, soon after the farewell party held in the end of December, 1985. Today, Edna Jeffrey is the main partner in the newly-constructed Market & Noe Center, which was built in place of the old bathhouse, next to Cafe Flore, at the intersection of Market and Noe Streets. [4][2]
4. After having served customers for over seven decades in the San Francisco's Castro District, the fourth and final location of Finnila's, Finnila's Health Club, opened for the general public in 1986 at 645 Taraval Street in the San Francisco's Sunset District. Hereafter, Finnila's was open only for women. The services included sauna-bathing, massage, aerobics and other health-related services. In the fall of 2000, Finnila's Health Club was shut down, due to retirement of Alfred Finnila.
Finnila's in a novel by Svevanne Auerbach
The Contest, a novel by Stevanne Auerbach, mentions the Market Street bathhouse. It calls Finnila's "a unique, much-needed hideaway, a steamy oasis in the heart of the city." According to Auerbach, "the place was kept spotless." [1][2]
Trivia
Director Don Siegel filmed the final scenes of the 1971 movie Dirty Harry on the Larkspur Landing area owned by Alfred Finnila - owner of Finnila's Finnish Baths - as well as the adjacent East Sir Francis Drake Boulevard in Larkspur, California. After hijacking a school bus, the character of "Scorpio" - played by Andy Robinson - drives into East Sir Francis Drake Boulevard at the Greenbrae interchange, before crashing into the site of the Hutchinson Company quarry.[5][6] During the filming of Dirty Harry, the movie crew - including the actor Clint Eastwood - visited Finnila's Finnish Baths in San Francisco for sauna bathing and for massage.
Awards and recognition
Still shortly before closing its popular Market Street location in San Francisco in the 1980s, Finnila's Finnish Baths was awarded the title "The Best" two times in row by the popular bi-weekly and free San Francisco Bay Area entertainment magazine San Francisco Bay Guardian. According to the paper, Finnila's was "The Best Sauna and Massage Parlor" in the San Francisco Bay Area. [7][8]
External links
References
- ^ a b Auerbach, Stevanne. The Contest.
- ^ a b c Auerbach, Stevanne. The Contest - Finnila's-related exerts. Cite error: The named reference "Finnila" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Lutheran Church of the Cross - homepage.
- ^ Edna Jeffrey Biography and synopsis of her novel, Till I'm with You Again.
- ^ "FINALE – Hutchinson Co. Quarry, Larkspur Landing, CA « Dirty Harry Filming Locations". Retrieved 2013-04-27.
- ^ Poskanzer, Jef. "Dirty Harry - filming locations". Retrieved 2013-04-27.
- ^ a b c San Francisco Bay Guardian - N:o 37, 1984.
- ^ A picture of the 1984 "The Best" award certificate granted to Finnila's by Bay Guardian