Fibre customer magazine 2022/2023

Take a look at the Nemus Futurum on video

Our operations

Presenting sustainable forest management

MARKKU RIMPILÄINEN, Photos: Pasi Salminen & Sami Tirkkonen

Nemus Futurum is Metsä Group's forest visitor centre that uses augmented reality to showcase Finnish forests and the best practices of sustainable forest management in various growth phases of the forest.

Guests learn about various types of forest site and forest man- agement methods, and see both periodic and continuous cover forestry. Augmented reality is used to expand the experience. Every guest is provided with an iPad that gives further information about the site and allows them to travel forwards and backwards in time. “With new technology, we can illustrate how the forest grows, and how various forest management measures affect tree growth,” says Annamari Heikkinen . She is a Communications Specialist at Metsä Group and Nemus Futurum’s main guide. As the guests move from the regeneration felling to the seedling site, the iPad displays an animation. It shows how well-managed spruce seedlings have more space and light, grow more quickly, and bind more carbon dioxide. Genuine forest experiences When the visitor centre was designed, it was clear that the guests would need to be present in a genuine Finnish forest.

A conifer takes an average 80 years to grow from a small seedling into a full-size tree. During that time, its growth in commercial forests is promoted by forest management in a variety of ways. Time is condensed at Metsä Group’s forest visitor centre Nemus Futurum, located near Lohja in Southern Finland. In a little more than two hours, the site presents a comprehensive overview of the best practices of sustainable forest management in the various growth phases of the forest. Guests also receive information about the benefits of nature management in commercial forests and come to understand how good forest management affects things like the climate and bio­ diversity. The guided tour starts at a site where new spruce seedlings have been planted after regeneration felling. Visitors then move through a stand of seven-year-old seedlings to a thinned forest that is about 60 years old. If forest management measures on the young stand are carried out at the right time, the first thinning can provide up to 30–50 per cent more wood.

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