Botanical Garden Oslo

Norway's oldest botanical garden (established 1814) with free admission to 6.5 hectares of geographically organized plant collections, a Victorian Palm House from 1868, and modern climate-controlled greenhouses.

Need a break from the city concrete? Explore Norway's oldest botanical garden. Established in 1814, open daily year-round with free admission to the outdoor gardens (greenhouses have separate hours). The space combines scientific plant collections with public park functions, meaning locals use it as a regular green space for picnics and walking.

The outdoor collections are organized geographically and thematically: a Rock Garden with alpine plants, a Scent Garden, systematic beds showing plant family relationships, and geographic sections representing Norway's different climate zones from coastal to mountain. The Victorian-style Palm House (built 1868) is the centerpiece greenhouse, featuring tropical plants under a glass dome. Two modern greenhouses (opened 2016) house Mediterranean and subtropical collections.

The garden operates on seasonal rhythms. Spring (April-May) brings blooming magnolias, rhododendrons, and the Rock Garden alpine display. Summer (June-August) fills the systematic beds with flowering perennials and the Scent Garden with herbs. Autumn (September-October) shows maple colors and late-season asters. Winter (November-March) is dormant outdoors but the greenhouses maintain tropical warmth year-round.

The adjacent Natural History Museum buildings house zoological and geological collections (separate admission). 

Handwerk Botaniske café operates inside Tøyen Manor (the oldest building in the garden), serving organic coffee, sourdough sandwiches, and pastries that beat typical museum cafeteria quality significantly..


The garden is a working scientific collection, not a decorative park. Expect botanical accuracy and informational labels over aesthetic perfection. This appeals to plant nerds and people who want quiet green space, not those expecting Versailles-level formal gardens.

Highlights


Walk the Rock Garden in spring (April-May) when alpine plants bloom. This section replicates Norwegian mountain environments with stone arrangements showing how plants adapt to harsh high-altitude conditions.
Visit the Victorian Palm House (1868) to see tropical plants under the original glass dome. The humid warmth in winter provides stark contrast to Oslo's cold outdoors. The spiral staircase leads to an upper walkway viewing palms from canopy level.
Explore the Scent Garden designed for sensory experience. Herbs, aromatic flowers, and textured plants are positioned for touching and smelling. Labels encourage interaction, unlike typical "do not touch" botanical displays.


Best time to go


April through May for spring blooms in the Rock Garden, magnolias, and rhododendrons. June through August for summer perennials in systematic beds and herbs in the Scent Garden. Weekday mornings 9-11am year-round for smallest crowds. Winter (November-March) works for greenhouse visits escaping cold outdoors, though outdoor gardens are dormant.

Time needed


45–120 minutes

Getting there


Take the Oslo Metro to Tøyen station (T-bane) and follow signs; the garden is a short walk from the station, about five minutes.

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