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Revier Hotel Oslo

No front desk. Check-in is via the app, and your phone is your room key. Rooms are spacious with hardwood floors, walk-in showers, and Egyptian cotton bedding. The larger studios and suites have kitchenettes. More well-designed aparthotel than traditional hotel. Michelin restaurant Savage on the 1st floor.

There is no front desk. No receptionist. No human being to greet you when you walk in. Everything at Revier runs through your phone, from check-in to room access. If that sounds liberating, you'll love it here. If your phone battery dies in the taxi from the airport, you have a problem.

The building sits in Kvadraturen, Oslo's oldest neighborhood, wedged between Akershus Fortress and the waterfront. Oslo Central Station is a short walk. The Opera House is close. You're in the thick of it without being on Karl Johan's tourist conveyor belt.

Rooms are sharp. Scandi-cool done right, with warm earth tones, Egyptian cotton bedding, and big flat-screens with streaming built in. Cleanliness is immaculate. Some units have small kitchenettes, which saves real money in a city where a lunch plate costs 250 NOK. No fridge in the standard rooms, though, which is annoying.

The food situation is the standout. Savage, the on-site restaurant, holds a Michelin star. Null Null does solid pasta for quicker meals. The rooftop bar, Revier Taket, has an enclosed orangery that works year-round. Breakfast, on the other hand, is underwhelming, a basic continental spread that doesn't match the rest of the building's ambition.

Lower floors and street-facing rooms catch weekend noise from the bars and rooftop crowd. No gym anywhere in the building. Book a table at Savage the second you confirm your room, not after you arrive.


The basement has an 18-seat screening room with curated film nights. Check the schedule, it's a solid way to spend a rainy Oslo evening.


Star rating
4

Hotel category
Boutique

Neighbourhood vibe


Kvadraturen is historic and walkable, with cobblestone streets between the fortress and the waterfront. Quiet on weekdays, livelier on weekend nights thanks to the bar scene.

What to do nearby


0.9km
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.
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The world's largest Munch collection, 13 floors of it, with free entry on Wednesday evenings and three versions of The Scream rotating throughout the day.
1.0km
Oslo's largest commercial gallery by exhibition space with multiple rooms and a retail stock of thousands of works available for purchase.

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125 years old. Rooms are individually decorated with hand-picked art, and the lobby bar, Bar Boman, houses one of the country's largest private collections of Edvard Munch prints. But the real draw is Theatercaféen, the grand Viennese-style restaurant on the ground floor, with its high ceilings and mirrored walls. It's been the place in Oslo where actors, politicians, and locals meet for over a century. Nationaltheateret station is 100 metres from the front door.