A 12th-century Hallingdal stave church reconstructed at the open-air museum on Bygdøy after being dismantled in the 1880s. Located inside the Norwegian Museum of Cultural History, you need a ticket to the museum to see the church.
The Society for the Preservation of Norwegian Ancient Monuments bought the old church when Gol replaced it with a new building; King Oscar II financed the re-erection at Bygdøy in 1884–85. Conservators in the 1880s restored the building toward an imagined medieval appearance, using Borgund as a model for missing details, so much of the visible exterior dates from the 1884–85 restoration while large parts of the main timber framework are original medieval material.
What makes this building distinct are the surviving medieval carpentry, a preserved west portal with carved dragon and plant motifs, runic inscriptions cut into interior staves, and a chancel that retains 17th-century painted decoration. The restoration removed later additions such as galleries and pulpits so the interior reads as a layered historic object rather than a single-period reconstruction. Practical note for research and interpretation: concentrate on the nave staves and chancel paintings to see the mix of original medieval fabric and post-medieval interventions; the building is also the central piece of the former King Oscar II collection and one of the surviving stave churches from Norway’s medieval period.