The lobby has an Art Nouveau stained-glass ceiling that stops you in your tracks. It also doubles as a bar and restaurant, which means check-in can feel like pushing through a Friday crowd at a pub. That tension, beautiful space versus constant buzz, defines Hotel No13.
Location is the whole pitch here. Torgallmenningen, Bergen's main square, is right outside the door. Bryggen is a five-minute walk. The Fish Market is two minutes. The Fløibanen funicular, maybe five. The airport bus stops practically on the doorstep. You won't need taxis or transit for anything central.
The rooms lean bold, colorful, and small. Some rooms have freestanding bathtubs and Nespresso machines, but those are the upgrades. Standard rooms are tight. A rare bonus for Norway: most rooms have air conditioning.
Breakfast is served under that stained-glass ceiling, buffet plus made-to-order hot dishes like omelets. It's a cut above the usual Norwegian hotel spread.
The noise problem is real. Rooms facing the square get street musicians, weekend nightlife, and general city racket well past midnight on Fridays and Saturdays. Ask for a courtyard-facing room when booking. You lose the view of the mountains from the balcony, but you'll sleep. No on-site gym, though there's access to one nearby.