Radisson Blu Scandinavia Hotel Oslo

Upper-floor fjord views that rival any hotel in Oslo. One of the few central Oslo hotels with an indoor pool and sauna.

Twenty-two stories of concrete rising above the Royal Palace neighborhood. The Radisson Blu Scandinavia is a large-scale conference hotel. The lobby buzzes with name badges and rolling suitcases. No hygge here, no boutique warmth. This is a transit terminal that happens to have beds.

But those upper floors. Get a room above the 10th floor with a fjord view and the whole calculus changes. The Oslo Fjord stretches out below, Holmenkollen sits on the horizon, and suddenly the institutional corridors don't matter as much. Ask specifically for a high-floor fjord view when booking. The city-side rooms are fine. The fjord-side rooms are the reason to stay.

The pool in the basement wellness center is a genuine rarity for central Oslo. Decent size, proper sauna alongside it. Families pack it on weekends, so go early morning if you want it to yourself.

The problems are structural. Nearly 500 rooms feed into a handful of elevators. Between 8 and 9:30 AM, the wait is painful. Lower floors facing the street get tram noise. Temperature control in the rooms runs hot in winter, which means cracking a window and choosing between stuffiness and street sound. Some standard rooms still show their age, while renovated rooms look sharp with dark wood and modern lines. You're rolling the dice unless you confirm which you're getting.

The Flybussen airport bus stops at the front door. No dragging luggage to the train station, no $100 taxi. 


Star rating
4

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Business Hotel
Crowd Pleaser
Family Friendly

The Summit Bar on the 21st floor has floor-to-ceiling windows. You don't need a suite to get the best view in the building, just buy a drink.


Quiet, stately area near the Royal Palace, a short walk from Karl Johans gate but outside the tourist crush. Aker Brygge waterfront is 10-15 minutes downhill on foot.

What to do nearby


1.9km
Experience Oslo's original sauna village with architecturally unique wood-fired saunas including the city's only wheelchair-accessible floating sauna, and guided Aufguss rituals that commercial sauna boats don't offer.
1.9km
The most famous angry face in Norway. It captures a universal human emotion so perfectly that it makes people laugh in recognition, regardless of their language.
2.0km
See the original full-size plaster casts that became Vigeland Sculpture Park's famous bronzes and granites, and tour the artist's preserved 1943 apartment with custom-designed furniture inside his former studio building.

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