- Date
- Monday, June 15
- Time
- 17:00-20:00
- Price
- 7€/child, 14€/adult
- Age
- 8-15 years
The Finnish Aviation Museum's Final Call event series highlights favourites from the current museum before the move to new premises. The first evening focuses on the MiG-21BIS fighter and its history. Museum guides present the MiG fighter and the Hawk experience centre, and visitors can try sitting in both fighter cockpits. It is best suited to families where school-age children or teens are interested in aircraft, technology, and aviation history.
- Organizer
- Suomen Ilmailumuseo
At a glance
- Date
- Monday, June 15
- Time
- 17:00-20:00
- Price
- 7€/child, 14€/adult
- Age
- 8-15 years
- Languages
- fi
- Toilets
- Yes
- Baby changing
- Yes
- Stroller-friendly
- Partial
- Accessibility
- Partial
- Food available
- Yes
- Parking nearby
- Yes
- Travel estimate with HSL from my location
- Accessibility
- The museum is mostly accessible, but some exhibition-hall galleries and aircraft objects involve stairs. Step-free access to the cockpit try-outs has not been separately confirmed, so check with the museum in advance if that is important.
Plan your visit
- Practical notes
- The event runs in the evening from 17:00 to 20:00. The programme is museum- and guide-led, so it works best if the child can listen to short presentations and wait for a turn to try the cockpits.
- Schedule notes
- The event runs 17:00-20:00. The museum says a more detailed programme will be published closer to the event.
- Booking notes
- The event information does not give a separate registration or booking instruction. Check the museum page before going if the cockpit try-outs are the main reason for your visit.
- Price notes
- The event is included in Aviation Museum admission: adults 14 €, ages 7-17 and concession groups 7 €, under 7s, Museum Card holders, and Kaikukortti holders 0 €.
- Age notes
- The theme is best for school-age children and teens who are interested in fighter aircraft, flight technology, or military aviation history. Younger children can join with an adult, but the programme is not specifically built for children.