The museum sits directly beneath the Holmenkollen Ski Jump and presents the history of skiing in Norway through equipment, competition memorabilia and documentary material. Exhibits span early wooden skis and bindings to material from competitive ski jumping and cross country. The location under the jump gives the displays immediate context; many artifacts relate to events that took place on the adjacent hill. The museum is particularly useful for understanding the evolution of ski technique and competition in Norway. Display cases and labeled objects focus on technological changes in ski manufacture and on the sport's role in Norwegian culture.
Practical planning note: the museum and the jump structure are physically connected, so a visit here explains the mechanics and traditions you see from the jump plaza above.Inside, it covers 4,000 years of skiing history. The real highlight for international visitors is the Polar History section. You can see the actual makeshift equipment Roald Amundsen and Fridtjof Nansen used to conquer the poles. It looks terrifyingly fragile by modern standards.