By: Chris ⎜ Last updated



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Oslo Opera House
Oslo Opera House

The Oslo Opera House is worth visiting even if you have no interest in opera. It's a five-minute walk from Oslo Central Station, and the roof may be the best first stop in the city. You do not need an opera ticket to enjoy it: the sloping roof is free, and you can walk all over it. On the top you will see Akershus Fortress to the west, the Munch museum to the south-east and Bjørvika all around you. Afterwards step inside to see the oak-lined foyer. 

The roof

As you walk from Oslo Central Station towards the fjord, you will immediately see the white sloping roof. Walk up the roof, and even though it's not Oslo's highest viewpoint, you get a good view around the area.

When done, go down on the fjord side. Before you go inside, look at the sea near the base of the building for Monica Bonvicini's She Lies, a glass and steel sculpture that floats and rotates with wind and tide. You might confuse it for a floating scrap heap. Most people walk straight past it. 

Note that the marble can be slippery when wet, icy or snow-dusted. In winter, parts of the roof may be restricted or even fully closed. 

The foyer

The oak is what hits you first, a contrast to the completely white exterior. A large undulating wall wraps the main auditorium, and it softens the whole interior. 

Olafur Eliasson's The Other Wall, 340 m2 of white light panels, is easy to miss if you are only scanning for the main staircase or toilets. Take the time to look.

You do not need a performance ticket to enter the foyer during public opening hours. 

In a city where you often have to pay 20 NOK to use a public toilet, the Opera House lobby has excellent, clean, free facilities. 

Where to go next

The Opera House sits at the centre of Bjørvika with several attractions nearby.

MUNCH is right next door and is natural to combine with a visit to the Opera House.

Deichman Bjørvika, the public library, is across the street and is the best free follow-up. Deichman is a better bad-weather option than a long waterfront walk. This is not your standard public library, worth a visit even if you're not that into books.

If the weather is good, continue south towards Sørenga for a longer harbour walk, and outdoor swimming areas at the far end. The floating fjord saunas of which there are several nearby are good for any weather, especially so for a cold, rainy day. Heading west towards Akershus Fortress (approx 15 minutes walk) takes you straight from new Oslo to medieval and military Oslo.

Tours and performances

The guided tour is worth it if you care about architecture, stage machinery or backstage spaces. Skip it if you are just filling time. English tours usually run on weekends, last about 50 minutes and have limited capacity. Tickets are released on Tuesdays for tours that same week, so check early if you are visiting on a weekend. Travellers who leave everything until the night before tend to find them sold out.

If you like opera or ballet, seeing a performance is a better experience than just photographing the exterior. The building changes at night, when the oak foyer glows behind the glass facade, and the harbour outside goes dark. 

The dress code is practical (smart casual) more so than formal, but you will not look out of place if you prefer to dress up. 



Best time to go


Late spring to early autumn for the rooftop; weekdays and early morning or sunset to avoid peak tourist crowds; performances mainly in evenings, book ahead. Sunset is magical here. The white marble changes color to pink and orange, and the glass facade reflects the light.

Time needed


30–180 minutes depending on roof visit versus attending a performance

Getting there


Reach the site on foot from Oslo Central Station (Oslo S) or from Jernbanetorget metro station; follow the waterfront promenade toward the harbour and you will arrive at the opera plaza and main entrance. Alternatively take the tram to the Bjørvika stop.

What to do nearby


0.3km
Experience Oslo's original sauna village with architecturally unique wood-fired saunas including the city's only wheelchair-accessible floating sauna, and guided Aufguss rituals that commercial sauna boats don't offer.
0.4km
One of the world's largest party saunas holding 80 people inside a cultural festival village with food trucks, DJs at weekends, bars, art installations, and theatrical Aufguss rituals.
0.8km
A chronological presentation of Norway's defence history situated inside Akershus Fortress, all for free.

Hotels nearby


1.3km 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.
1.8km Insider pick
Built around an art collection that most galleries would envy. Every room has original work, there's a dedicated curator, and the spa has a 12-metre pool and a proper Turkish hamam. Your room key gets you into the Astrup Fearnley Museum next door for free. The rooftop terrace on a clear evening is hard to beat. The price tag is matching.
2.0km Insider pick
A restored 1930s power station with original Art Deco tilework, a rooftop pool overlooking the city, and seven restaurants under one roof. There's nothing else in Oslo like this. If you want a hotel that makes you cancel your afternoon plans because you'd rather stay in, this is it.