Sommerro Hotel Oslo

A restored 1930s power station with original Art Deco tilework, a rooftop pool overlooking the city, and seven restaurants under one roof. There's nothing else in Oslo like this. If you want a hotel that makes you cancel your afternoon plans because you'd rather stay in, this is it.

The lobby hits you like a movie set. A converted 1930s electrical company headquarters in Frogner, dripping with custom furniture, rich woods, and period details that someone spent serious money restoring. This is not a quiet hotel. Seven restaurants, multiple bars, a cinema, live jazz. Locals pack the ground-floor brasserie on weekends. The energy is infectious if you're into it, exhausting if you're not.

The rooftop pool is heated to 28°C year-round with views over the city and fjord. Sounds great. The catch is it's reserved for suite guests and specific wellness packages. Book a standard room and you're limited to the basement pool, a beautifully restored historic space but not the one in the marketing photos. This frustrates people, and rightly so.

Entry-level rooms, the Loft and Twin Alcove categories, run about 19 to 23 square metres. Fine for one person. Two people with suitcases will be climbing over each other. Rooms facing the internal atrium pick up restaurant and bar noise, especially Friday and Saturday nights when music runs late. Ask for a higher floor facing Sommerrogata if sleep matters to you.

The Frogner neighbourhood is leafy, upscale, full of embassies and boutiques. A 10 to 15 minute walk to the Royal Palace and the city centre. The breakfast buffet in the grand hall is excellent, but go before 9 AM or you'll be fighting for a table under the murals. There's also a free in-house cinema showing classic films, worth asking the concierge about.


The rooftop pool isn't included with standard rooms. Book a suite or wellness package if that's why you're coming, or you'll be disappointed.


Star rating
5

Hotel category
Luxury

Neighbourhood vibe


Frogner is Oslo's poshest residential area. Quiet, tree-lined streets, embassies, high-end boutiques. A 10 to 15 minute walk to the city centre.

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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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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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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