Scandic Vulkan

Steps from Mathallen and Grünerløkka, Oslo's best food and bar neighborhood, at a reasonable Oslo price.

The location does the heavy lifting here. Scandic Vulkan sits directly beside Mathallen, Oslo's indoor food hall, with the Akerselva River running past and Grünerløkka a five-minute walk across the bridge. The neighborhood is walkable, safe, and full of independent bars and cafes. It's not the city center, though. Karl Johans gate is a 15-20 minute walk, or a short hop on bus 54 or 34.

Standard rooms are small, roughly 15-18 square meters. Two open suitcases and you're climbing over them. Wardrobe space is an open rail with a few hangers, not a closet. No mini-fridge, no kettle, no coffee maker in the standard category. You need to upgrade to Superior for those basics, and the price jump is often small enough to be worth it.

The bathrooms have frosted glass doors that don't fully seal. Not ideal if you're sharing with someone you're not extremely comfortable with. Sound travels, light leaks through. It's a design choice that looks good in photos and works poorly in practice.

The breakfast buffet is genuinely strong, with solid organic and allergy-friendly options. The gym is well-equipped by hotel standards, and free bike loans from the front desk are a smart way to explore the riverside paths. Ask for a higher floor facing the river or the city. Rooms facing the inner courtyard are dark and cramped-feeling.


Star rating
3

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Best Breakfast
Crowd Pleaser

Book a Superior Room. The price difference is often negligible, but you get a kettle, bathrobes, and a bit more breathing room. Standard rooms have none of that.


Vulkan is a revitalized industrial zone along the river, full of food spots, cafes, and weekend energy. It's trendy without being pretentious, but it's not the tourist center.

What to do nearby


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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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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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A functioning municipal seat that doubles as a concentrated gallery of postwar Norwegian civic art and the annual host venue for the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony.

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