Radisson Blu Plaza

Direct connection to Oslo Central Station and the best high-rise views in the city.

Thirty-seven floors connected to Oslo Central Station by a pedestrian bridge. Step off the Flytoget airport express, walk across the bridge, and you're in the lobby without touching the sidewalk. 

The lobby is big, busy, and corporate. This is a 700-room tower, and it moves like one. Morning elevator waits during the 8:00 to 9:30 rush are real. Budget extra time if you have a train to catch.

Standard rooms are clean but compact. Scandi-minimal decor, functional furniture, not much personality. You're paying for altitude and address, not square meters. The difference between a forgettable stay and a memorable one here comes down to your room assignment. Ask for a high floor with a fjord view. The city-side rooms are fine. The fjord-side rooms, looking out toward the Opera House and the water, are a different experience entirely. Corner rooms, if available, have dual-aspect windows and feel noticeably bigger.

The gym sits on the 37th floor, with a view of the city which makes a treadmill session more interesting than it has any right to be. The pool is up high too. Fine for a dip, not for laps, and crowded on weekends. The Top Bar on the 34th floor is worth a drink at sunset even if you're not staying here.

Summer can be a problem. The air conditioning doesn't always keep up when Oslo gets warm, and rooms on the sunny side turn stuffy. Minimum check-in age is 20, which catches some younger travelers off guard.


Star rating
4

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Business Hotel
Crowd Pleaser
Train Station

Ask for a high-floor corner room with fjord view. Corner rooms have dual-aspect windows and feel much bigger than standard rooms.


Right next to Oslo Central Station and Oslo Spektrum arena. Busy, urban, transit-oriented. The prettier parts of Oslo, are a 10-minute walk.

What to do nearby


1.3km
A chronological presentation of Norway's defence history situated inside Akershus Fortress, all for free.
1.3km
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
1.4km
Experience the public storytelling side of the Nobel Peace Prize through an immersive dark room with 1,000 fiber-optic laureate portraits, see an actual gold peace medal, and engage with current year exhibitions about conflict resolution 50 meters from where the actual prize ceremony happens.

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