The Hanseatic Museum tells the story of the German merchants who ran Bergen's trade for centuries. The main building, Finnegården, is closed for restoration until at least 2027. The entire experience has moved to Schøtstuene, the original Hanseatic assembly rooms located just behind Bryggen. It's a collection of preserved 18th-century wooden buildings that smell like old timber and centuries of smoke. Walls are blackened. Corridors are narrow. Sleeping bunks built for apprentices look too small for adults.
Schøtstuene served as the communal gathering and cooking spaces for the Bryggen merchants, because open fires were banned inside the main trading houses. Fire risk in those tightly packed wooden structures was constant. The cookhouses and assembly halls here are the only surviving original Hanseatic rooms of their kind anywhere.
Join a guided tour. Guides fill in the details of the merchants' social hierarchy and daily life. Tours are included in your ticket. English tours typically run at 13:00 in the off-season and more frequently in summer. Build your visit around that schedule.
Cruise ship groups flood the Bryggen area midday and the cramped wooden interiors get crowded fast. Go early morning or after 15:00. Pair this with Bryggens Museum next door, which covers the archaeological layers beneath Bryggen predating the Hanseatic period. Together they cover why the wharf looks the way it does.
Practical Details
Tickets run about 15 EUR per adult. Kids free. Current entrance is at Øvregaten 50. Plan 45 to 90 minutes depending on whether you catch a guided tour. The historic wooden buildings have limited accessibility for wheelchair users. Winter hours shrink considerably and may be weekends only, so check the current schedule before you go.