Skip to main content

Pirkanmaa province faces maintenance choices

Most of the cash from the Finnish government will support bridge projects with road maintenance being prioritised, noted Antti Laine, at Pirkanmaa’s ELY Centre.
By David Arminas May 2, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Rural Finnish roads are facing a funding squeeze (image © Vladimir Mironov/Dreamstime)

The Finnish government, in its 2025 draft state budget, has allocated nearly €250,000 in state subsidies for private roads in Pirkanmaa province.

However, critics say this is still low given that it is the same amount that was paid out annually between 2017-2023, according to a report by the private Finnish News Agency (Oy Suomen Tietotoimisto). Most of the 2025 cash will go towards a few bridge projects while basic improvements to the load-bearing capacity of the roads are largely left without state support.

Antti Laine, road maintenance expert at the Pirkanmaa’s ELY Centre (Centre for Economic Development, Transport and the Environment), said that there are now clearly more applications for road improvements than can be supported by available funds. This means that strict prioritisation must be made when handing out cash subsidies.

Many of Finland’s 100,000km of private roads are open to the general public, but may have different speed limits and regulations from public roads. Private roads are usually dead ends and are maintained by the local community which uses them. They may not be eligible for communal subsidies.

Laine also said that grants are primarily granted to projects where traffic on the road has been completely blocked or is threatened to be blocked due to surface damage.

Finland has 15 ELY Centres - one for each province - which promote regional competitiveness, well-being and sustainable development, as well as initiatives to curb climate change. Pirkanmaa is also known as Tampere, which is the name of the province’s capital city, an industrial centre.

Related Content

  • Amey handling maintenance work for Scotland
    August 17, 2022
    Amey is now handling road maintenance work for Scotland.
  • PPRS Nice 2018: maintenance moves mountains
    June 22, 2018
    Strategic maintenance was a major theme at the second Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit in Nice, France. The world is changing, mobility is changing and so roads must change and adapt for the future.” With this brief statement, Jacques Tavernier opened the second PPRS Summit. “At the same time there is a growing awareness of poor or non-existent maintenance for highways. The question for this conference is how to adapt road maintenance in the face of this challenge,” said Tavernier, in his role as
  • China's Roads Convention focuses on sustainability
    February 9, 2012
    IRF joins with key Chinese transport authorities to lead the way in efforts to make sustainable rural mobility, transport and access a reality for millions throughout the world.
  • Preventive maintenance - preserving pavements
    February 14, 2012
    In the first article of a three-part series on preventive maintenance, Alan S. Kercher, of Kercher Engineering, highlights the value to road agencies of a properly implemented pavement preservation programme For many road agencies, the budget for maintenance, rehabilitation and reconstruction (MR&R) of their roads is focused mainly on the pavements that are in the worst condition. In the short term, this common approach may seem very logical. However, when focused on expensive structural improvements,