By: Chris ⎜ Last updated



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Oslo City Hall seen from the City Hall Square
Oslo City Hall seen from the City Hall Square

The City Hall is the two red-brick towers, which are easy to walk past on the way to Aker Brygge, the National Museum or the Nobel Peace Center

Don't walk past, go inside. This is one of the best free cultural attractions in Oslo, and it takes just a few minutes. This is not a museum, it's a working political space filled with art.

The Main Hall hosts the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony every December, but the ceremony connection is the least interesting thing about the building. The murals are the reason you should come here.

The Main Hall

After security (there's a bag check, usually not taking long), you'll walk straight into the Main Hall. It's a big room. Stand in the middle, as the murals are designed to be viewed from a distance, working almost like a public storybook painted across every wall.

What you're looking at is Norway after the Second World War. The artworks are full of normal people going about their daily work: workers, sailors, families, farmers and builders. 

The building was planned before the war, and built across a long period, interrupted by the war, and opened in 1950. That timeline shows in the art: reconstruction and collective effort. It's a statement about the type of society Norway wanted to build.

The Nobel ceremony room

The Main Hall is where the Nobel Peace Prize is awarded each year in December. If you want to learn more about the Peace Prize, visit the Nobel Peace Center across the square. Do City Hall first, then cross over the square for the exhibition.

Around 10 December every year, access can be restricted due to the Peace Prize ceremony and related events. 

The bells

Maybe the most interesting thing about the building, the towers consist of 49 bells, and the carillon plays hourly from morning until midnight. The playlist can be unexpectedly contemporary. Tunes include Grieg, Björk, the Assassin's Creed Valhalla soundtrack, and the Twin Peaks theme. 

The playlist changes regularly, so don't count on hearing a specific tune. Check the official carillon page for the playlist. In June, July, and August, there are live carillon concerts on Sundays at 15:00.



Best time to go


Weekday mornings or early afternoons outside major events; all year for interior viewing

Time needed


30–90 minutes

Getting there


Reach the site from central hubs such as Jernbanetorget or Aker Brygge, then follow the waterfront west to Rådhusplassen (the square in front of the City Hall).

What to do nearby


0.2km
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.
0.2km
Watch classic Norwegian drama (such as Ibsen with English subtitles) in the 125-year-old gilded auditorium, or tour the Golden Hall and backstage areas where Norwegian cultural history has been performed for over a century.
0.3km Insider pick
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.

Hotels nearby


0.2km Insider pick
125 years old. Rooms are individually decorated with hand-picked art, and the lobby bar, Bar Boman, houses one of the country's largest private collections of Edvard Munch prints. But the real draw is Theatercaféen, the grand Viennese-style restaurant on the ground floor, with its high ceilings and mirrored walls. It's been the place in Oslo where actors, politicians, and locals meet for over a century. Nationaltheateret station is 100 metres from the front door.
0.3km
The most historically significant hotel in Oslo, as central as it gets just steps from the Parliament and the Royal Palace.
0.4km Insider pick
Bristol has been in operation for more than a century. It's technically part of the Thon Hotels group, but nothing about being inside the building indicates that it is a chain hotel. The lobby has the weight of an old European grand hotel with wood-panelled corridors and original chandeliers.