Home Hotel Gabelshus Oslo

Three included meals a day in one of Europe's most expensive cities, inside a building with actual character.

An ivy-covered brick building from 1912 with Persian rugs, Chesterfield sofas, and a fireplace in the lobby. The Gabelshus looks like a wealthy aunt's country house, not a hotel. That atmosphere is the draw, and it's real, not staged.

The economics here are hard to argue with. Breakfast, afternoon waffles and coffee, and a light dinner are all included in the room rate. In Oslo, where a mediocre restaurant meal runs 300-400 NOK per person, that adds up fast. The dinner is a simple buffet, usually soup, salad, and one hot dish. Don't expect culinary fireworks, but it's solid, and it's free.

The trade-off is space. Standard rooms are small. Not "European small", more like "open your suitcase on the bed because there's no floor" small. Standard rooms starting at a ridiculous 12 sqm. The building is over a hundred years old, and it shows in the room dimensions. Old wooden floors creak, and sound travels between floors. Ask for a top-floor room to avoid hearing footsteps overhead.

Frogner is embassy-row Oslo: quiet, leafy, expensive-looking townhouses. Skillebekk tram stop is a short walk, and from there it's ten minutes to the city center. The garden terrace is a rare luxury in this city, worth using in summer. There's also a basement sauna and steam room that most people seem to walk right past.


Star rating
3

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Budget Hero
Crowd Pleaser
Historic Gem

Ask for a top-floor garden-view room. You dodge the creaky-floor noise from above and the street noise. The basement sauna and steam room are often empty.


Frogner is Oslo's quietest upscale neighborhood: embassies, old townhouses, leafy streets. Safe and calm, but you're a tram ride from the action.

What to do nearby


0.9km
Oslo's largest commercial gallery by exhibition space with multiple rooms and a retail stock of thousands of works available for purchase.
1.0km
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.
1.1km
The working residence of Norway's King and Queen through lavish 19th-century state chambers during summer, or year-round you can watch the daily Changing of the Guard ceremony.

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