Contemporary art at Kode Stenersen museum in Bergen

Bergen's primary venue for rotating contemporary art exhibitions, housed in a functionalist building and covered by the same ticket that gets you into all four Kode museums.

Kode Stenersen sits right along Lille Lungegårdsvannet, the octagonal lake in Bergen's centre. It's the youngest of the four Kode buildings and the one that changes the most. While the other three house permanent collections you'll see once, Stenersen rotates temporary exhibitions six to eight times a year. 

The building itself is a modernist block opened in 1978 to house a huge art donation from collector Rolf Stenersen. That original gift included around 250 works of international modern art, with names like Picasso, Paul Klee, and Sonia Delaunay. You won't always see those specific pieces on the walls, since they rotate through the Kode network, but whatever's on when you visit will lean contemporary, experimental, and often a bit challenging. The dedicated contemporary section, Babel, is the part that keeps Bergen locals coming back.

Treat Kode like an art crawl

Your ticket works across all four Kode museums (Kode Lysverket, Kode Permanenten and Kode Rasmus Meyer), and they're lined up next to each other along the same street. On a rainy day, and this is Bergen, so budget for several, you can spend a full afternoon moving between the buildings without getting wet for more than a few seconds.

The ground floor

Even if you're not sure you want a full gallery visit, the ground floor of Stenersen is worth a stop. It has Bergen's largest independent art bookstore, with a strong selection of Scandinavian design books, photography collections, and prints. Skip the troll figurines at the Fish Market and buy something here instead.

Café Smakverket also lives on the ground floor and has been here since 2008. The eggs Benedict with smoked trout is consistently good, and the coffee is better than you'd expect from a museum café. It's a popular breakfast and lunch spot with office workers from the area, not just tourists passing through. Get there before the lunch rush if you want a table without hovering.

Bergen Card and seasonal pricing

If you're visiting between October and April, the Bergen Card gets you into all Kode buildings for free. During summer season (May through September), it's a 25% discount. 

Check the Kode website for current ticket prices and seasonal hours. The schedule shifts between summer and winter, and the buildings don't all keep the same days or closing times.


Your Kode ticket is valid for two consecutive days across all four buildings. Split the visit across two afternoons to avoid museum fatigue.

Highlights


Rotating temporary exhibitions featuring Norwegian and international contemporary artists across spacious, minimalist galleries designed for modern installations and multimedia work.
A single ticket grants two-day access to all four Kode museum buildings along the lake, letting you split the visit across afternoons.
The ground floor café is a local lunch spot, and the museum shop carries art books and Nordic design objects.


Best time to go


Rainy afternoons

Time needed


45-60 minutes

Getting there


Five-minute walk from the Byparken stop on the Bybanen light rail line. Also a short walk from the central fish market and Bergen city centre.

What to do nearby


1.1km Insider pick
Full panorama of Bergen's peninsula, harbour, and surrounding fjords. Hiking trails start right at the top.
1.5km Insider pick
A quick funicular ride from central Bergen to a summit with views over the city, fjords, and islands, plus forest trails that leave the crowds behind within minutes.
2.8km Insider pick
A cable car ascent to 643 meters with panoramic views of Bergen, the fjords, and surrounding islands on clear days, plus access to the five-hour Vidden hiking trail to Fløyen.

Hotels nearby


0.5km Insider pick
A 41-room boutique hotel with genuine personality, an outstanding à la carte breakfast, and one of Bergen's best locations. Charmante goes full 19th-century Parisian drama. Deep jewel tones. Patterned wallpapers. Velvet upholstery. 41 rooms, each uniquely decorated.
0.6km
The Grand Hotel Terminus's next-door sibling and its stylistic opposite. Where the Terminus is wood panelling and whisky, Zander K is raw concrete, blond wood, and blue glass. Scandinavian minimalism that borders on austere.
0.7km
The current buildings date from after the great fire of 1702, but centuries-old timber walls have been preserved inside. All 37 rooms are different. Exposed beams, dark wood, velvety textiles in deep colours, floors that creak. This is the only hotel actually inside one of Bryggen's original timber structures.