Scandic St Olavs Plass Oslo

A quiet, central location in Oslo with one of the better hotel breakfasts in the city.

The location is the trick here. St. Olavs Plass sits on a quiet square a few blocks north of Karl Johans Gate, which means you're five minutes from the National Gallery and the Royal Palace grounds without the street noise that often plagues with such a central location. The square itself is calm. The building shares space with the Edderkoppen Theatre, which gives the lobby a slightly more interesting feel than your average Scandic.

The breakfast is good. Fresh salmon, proper bread, solid hot options. It's the kind of spread that makes you skip lunch.

Now, the rooms. The standard and economy categories are small, somewhere around 12 to 15 square metres. Upgrade to a Superior if space matters, and ask for a room with a balcony, because a surprising number of rooms have one. Request a courtyard-facing room if you're a light sleeper, or a high floor facing the square if you want a view.

There's no real air conditioning. The system is more of a gentle suggestion than actual cooling. On a warm summer day, the rooms get stuffy. Opening windows helps but lets in early morning light. Some hallways and bathrooms look tired, a bit institutional. Clean, but not fresh. 


Star rating
3

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Best Breakfast
Crowd Pleaser
Family Friendly

Book a Superior Room or higher to guarantee a balcony or bathtub. Specify courtyard-facing for quiet, or high floor facing St. Olavs Plass for a view.


A quiet residential-feeling square just north of the main tourist drag. Safe, walkable, and close to museums and parks, but not where the nightlife or restaurant scene is concentrated.

What to do nearby


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The largest art museum in Norway exhibiting some of the most iconic Norwegian paintings, including the original Scream oil painting and famous national romantic paintings like The Bridal Procession on the Hardangerfjord that define Norway's national identity, all in one building.
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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
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Walk the ramparts of a 700-year-old fortress, see where Norwegian kings and queens are buried, explore WWII resistance history in atmospheric museums, and watch sunset over Oslo's harbor from the best free viewpoint in the city.

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