Logo Contest
One of the first tasks for the five participating schools was finding a logo that would represent the project idea as well as the five nations.
In a first round each school carried out a local contest to find three winning logos. These three logos then entered the international contest.
![]() Italy 1 |
![]() Italy 2 |
![]() Italy 3 |
![]() Greece 1 |
![]() Greece 2 |
![]() Greece 3 |
![]() Finland 1 |
![]() Finland 2 |
![]() Finland 3 |
![]() Spain 1 |
![]() Spain 2 |
![]() Spain 3 |
![]() Germany 1 |
![]() Germany 2 |
![]() Germany 3 |
In the second round, the international voting, things got a bit weird:
The Italian voting produced a 12-points tie between Finland 1 and Spain 2, the Greek voting produced a second 12-points tie between the second Spanish logo and the first German logo, and the German voting produced another 12-points tie between Finland 1 and Spain 1.
After all the results came in, we were astonished that the international contest showed a tie, too: Finland 1 and Spain 2 each had 46 points, followed by the Spain 1 (42 points). The Italian, Greek, and German juries had a second round of voting between the first Finnish and the second Spanish logo only and announced their results on 23 January.
![]() Finland 1 46 points |
![]() Spain 2 46 points |
![]() Spain 1 42 points |
In the end, the Finnish logo won the international contest and after a few changes, it became the official project logo.
