Oslo Badstuforening Langkaia

Floating fjord saunas with architect-designed cabins, jump towers and direct water access that place sauna bathing in the middle of Oslo’s new waterfront.

This floating sauna village sits at Langkaia, directly across the water from the Opera House. It's run by Oslo Badstuforening (Oslo Sauna Association), a non-profit started by a group of enthusiasts who wanted authentic communal sauna culture in the city. Open daily 7am-11pm, the vibe is unpretentious, community-focused, and deliberately non-commercial. 

The centerpiece is Bademaschinen (The Sauna Machine), a massive colorful floating structure with two large wood-fired sauna rooms and two diving towers jutting into the fjord. The design looks industrial and playful, inspired by old oil drums that used to clutter Oslo's harbor. The wood-fired stoves burn birch and hit 80-90°C. The heat feels softer and smells better than electric saunas. You sweat, climb the diving tower, jump 3-4 meters into the fjord, gasp from the cold shock, climb back up. Repeat.

The view from water level shows the white marble Opera House and the leaning Munch Museum tower behind it. The changing rooms are simple communal spaces or small cubicles. There's a cold freshwater hose or basic outdoor shower to rinse fjord salt off your skin. The toilet is a portable unit on the quay. It's functional, not luxurious.

Here's the cost breakdown: 260 NOK for non-members for shared sauna sessions (Fellesbadstu), 150 NOK if you buy a yearly membership (400 NOK). Off-peak weekday tickets (10am-2:30pm) drop to 165 NOK. Private rentals of smaller saunas (like Rådhuset or Lundefuglen) run 1,200-1,600 NOK for 2 hours, holding 8-10 people.  If this location is fully booked, check Oslo Badstuforening Sukkerbiten (10 minutes east), or KOK Saunas at Langkaia right next to Oslo Badstuforening.


Bring your own padlock for the lockable lockers; the facility explicitly asks guests to supply one for securing valuables.

Highlights


Climb the Bademaschinen diving towers and jump. Two platforms rise above the sauna structure, about 3-4 meters high. The jump into 4-6°C winter water or 16-20°C summer water is the full Nordic experience.
Take a dip in the fjord water which is refreshing year-round. Winter drops to 0-4°C. Summer reaches maybe 16-20°C.
Feed the wood-fired stove inside the sauna rooms. Birch logs sit in piles near the stove. Add wood when temperature drops. Pour water on heated rocks for steam bursts (löyly). You control the heat collectively with whoever's sharing the space.


Best time to go


Mornings have the fewest people. Off-peak weekday tickets are cheapest (165 NOK). Winter amplifies the hot-cold contrast that makes sauna culture transcendent. Avoid weekend evenings when both locals and tourists pack the shared sessions.

Time needed


1–3 hours depending on how many sauna rounds you do and whether you include a walk or refreshments afterwards

Getting there


From Oslo Central Station (Oslo S) walk toward the Bjørvika waterfront and follow the quay past the Opera House to Langkaia; look for the blue reception building and the floating sauna cluster.

What to do nearby


2.9km
See and stand underneath the original balsa wood raft that Thor Heyerdahl sailed 8,000 kilometers across the Pacific in 1947 to prove ancient peoples could have crossed oceans

Hotels nearby


1.4km
You're three minutes on foot from Oslo's upscale waterfront area, packed with shops and restaurants.
1.4km
Upper-floor fjord views that rival any hotel in Oslo. One of the few central Oslo hotels with an indoor pool and sauna.
1.5km
Rooms with kitchenettes at mid-range prices, five minutes from the airport train.