Oslo City Hall

A functioning municipal seat that doubles as a concentrated gallery of postwar Norwegian civic art and the annual host venue for the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony.

Oslo City Hall occupies a prominent waterfront plot and serves as the working seat of the city administration. Designed by Arnstein Arneberg and Magnus Poulsson, the building was completed after interruption during World War Two and opened in 1950. The building is recognizable for its twin towers, red brick exterior and a sequence of public rooms intended as expressions of postwar civic identity rather than private ornament. 

The interior concentration of figurative murals, reliefs and decorative arts documents Norwegian history, labour and maritime life in a direct, narrative style. The Main Hall is the building's most visible ceremonial space and has national visibility because it is used for the annual Nobel Peace Prize presentation. Because the City Hall remains an active municipal building some rooms are closed during official business and large public events, so check access on the day you plan to go. Photographers and anyone interested in 20th century Nordic public art will find the scale and density of the murals notable compared with other municipal halls in Norway.


The bell ringer often updates the playlist for the 49 bells in the tower. You might hear the theme from Succession or Minecraft depending on the month.

Highlights


See the Main Hall to view the large narrative murals and the podium used for the Nobel Peace Prize presentation every December 10.
While you can explore the main areas alone, free guided tours run daily in the summer months to take you into the locked political chambers and up the tower.
Walk through the public rooms to examine murals and decorative works that illustrate Oslo's 20th century civic themes


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


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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.
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See how Oslo transformed itself from a concrete highway junction into one of Europe's most swimmable, walkable waterfronts.
1.2km Insider pick
Norway’s national opera and ballet in a purpose-built, walkable waterfront building that doubles as a public plaza.

Hotels nearby


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A budget-friendly price tag on the most central street in Oslo.
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Rooms with kitchenettes at mid-range prices, five minutes from the airport train.
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A well-equipped apartment with a washing machine and kitchenette, five minutes from Oslo Central Station.