Comfort Hotel Grand Central Oslo

A 19th-century station building with real architectural character, three minutes from the airport train platform, literally inside Oslo Central Station.

The hotel is inside Oslo Central Station. Not next to it, not across the street. Inside the Østbanehallen wing, a listed building from 1854. Roll out of bed and you're on the Flytoget platform in three minutes. For early flights or late arrivals with heavy bags, nothing in Oslo comes close.

High ceilings, exposed pipes, bold pop-art on the walls. The vibe is industrial-chic in a 19th-century shell, which sounds like a contradiction but works here. The lobby doubles as a co-working space with long communal tables and plenty of outlets, so it skews younger and busier than your typical hotel lobby.

The rooms are where it gets complicated. Old building, inconsistent floor plan. Some rooms have massive windows and generous height. Others are long, skinny, and short on natural light. The budget options are compact. Ask for a room in the original station wing, the historic part, for the best ceiling height and windows. Soundproofing is solid, which is surprising given the location. Shut the window and the city disappears.

The bathroom motion-sensor lights are a problem. They cut out mid-shower. They blind you at 3 AM. This is not a minor annoyance.

No minibar, no room service. A 24-hour lobby deli covers basics like sandwiches and beer. The gym is small but open around the clock, and the treadmills overlook the main station hall, which is at least entertaining. 


Star rating
3

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Business Hotel
Design Forward
Historic Gem

Ask for the 'Old Wing' at check-in. These rooms in the original 1854 building have significantly higher ceilings and larger windows than the newer additions.


Bjørvika is Oslo's busiest transit hub. Karl Johans gate, the Opera House, and the fjord are all within a five-minute walk, but the immediate surroundings are urban and hectic, not scenic.

What to do nearby


1.3km
Norway's oldest botanical garden (established 1814) with free admission to 6.5 hectares of geographically organized plant collections, a Victorian Palm House from 1868, and modern climate-controlled greenhouses.
1.4km
See the late-19th-century apartment where Henrik Ibsen lived and worked in his final years, now paired with a small theatre programme that brings his world into performance.
1.4km
A compact ceremonial forecourt that provides the classic axial view along Karl Johans gate and direct access to the Royal Palace and Palace Park.

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