Clarion Hotel Oslo

A design-forward hotel in Oslo's most architecturally striking district, right on the fjord promenade, with one of the best breakfasts in Oslo.

Andy Warhol's version of The Scream hangs in the lobby. The Munch Museum is a two-minute walk. The Opera House is right there. This hotel wears its art obsession on its sleeve, and the public spaces function as a small gallery worth wandering through. The Bjørvika district, with its striking 'Barcode' architecture and fjord promenade, is one of the more visually interesting neighborhoods in Oslo.

The breakfast buffet is exceptional. Omelet chef, organic spread, local fish, fresh breads, smoothies, the works. It's the kind of breakfast that makes you skip lunch. This is the hotel's strongest card, and it plays it well.

Standard rooms are a different story. Roughly 16 to 18 square meters. Clean Nordic lines, good beds, functional furniture, but tight on floor space. Open a large suitcase and you're climbing over it. Ask for a higher floor facing the fjord or the Munch Museum. Lower floors look onto office buildings and streets, which kills the mood.

Oslo Central Station is a five-minute walk, which makes getting around painless. The area feels modern and safe, removed from the scruffier blocks around the station itself.

No pool. No spa. If that matters, the sister property Clarion Hotel The Hub has both, or head to one of the floating saunas on the fjord. KOK and Oslo Badstuforening are a 5-minute walk and way more fun than a hotel sauna. 


Star rating
4

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Best Breakfast
Crowd Pleaser
Design Forward

Request a high floor facing the fjord or the Munch Museum. Lower floors face office buildings with zero privacy and traffic noise.


Bjørvika is Oslo's modern waterfront district, all glass and steel and cultural institutions. It's polished, walkable, and five minutes from the central station without feeling like you're next to one.

What to do nearby


1.1km
Walk the ramparts of a 700-year-old fortress, see where Norwegian kings and queens are buried, explore WWII resistance history in atmospheric museums, and watch sunset over Oslo's harbor from the best free viewpoint in the city.
1.1km
Experience the human story of Norwegian resistance during Nazi occupation (1940-1945) through atmospheric dark-to-light museum design, illegal newspapers hidden in firewood, saboteur equipment concealed in fish barrels, and the Heavy Water Sabotage that stopped Germany's nuclear program
1.2km
3,000 color-changing LED lights hanging from pine trees that pulse like breathing or swaying grass, creating the sensation of entering a bioluminescent forest.

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