Oslo Opera House

Norway’s national opera and ballet in a purpose-built, walkable waterfront building. Walk straight up the marble roof for free and get a view that covers half the city.

The Opera House is a five-minute walk from Oslo Central Station, and it just might be the best first stop in the city. The roof walk costs nothing, it takes half an hour, and the views from the top give you a mental map of Oslo before you've done anything else.

Walk the Roof

Snøhetta designed the building so the roof slopes from the water's edge up to a broad viewing platform. You walk up white Carrara marble and Norwegian granite, open to everyone, all day. 

From the top you get Akershus Fortress to the west, the fjord islands straight ahead, and the MUNCH museum right next door. Walk counterclockwise and stop at the higher corner to line up the fortress against the water. That's the photo.

The marble gets dangerously slippery when wet or icy. In winter, sections of the roof are roped off entirely. Wear shoes with grip any time of year, and if it's been raining, take it slow on the steeper sections. 

Inside the Foyer

The outside is all white stone and glass. Inside, it's oak everywhere. The "Wave Wall," a massive curving structure of golden oak strips, wraps around the main auditorium. It works as acoustic insulation, but mostly you'll notice how warm the whole space feels compared to the roof you just walked down from. The lobby windows run about 15 metres tall with almost no framing, so you're looking straight back out at the fjord.

Worth finding: the Olafur Eliasson wall panel near the roof supports, a perforated surface lit from behind to look like melting ice. It's tucked away and easy to walk past.

You don't need a performance ticket to enter the foyer, browse the shop, or get a coffee. It's open Monday to Saturday from 11:00, Sundays from 12:00.

Seeing a Show

The main auditorium seats about 1,350 in a horseshoe layout, so you're close to the stage from pretty much anywhere. Every seat has a small screen for translated libretti in Norwegian and English alongside the original language. 

Backstage tours run in English on Saturdays and Sundays, last about 50 minutes, and sell out fast. Tickets go on sale every Tuesday for that same week, so check the Opera House website on Tuesday morning if you want a spot. There's also a free pre-show lecture one hour before main stage performances, but it's in Norwegian only.

If you have two days in Oslo, come twice: once for the roof during the day, and once in the evening when the oak-lined foyer is lit up behind all that glass. The MUNCH museum is next door, and Deichman Bjørvika, Oslo's main public library, is a two-minute walk. You can fill a solid half-day in Bjørvika.


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. It's a perfect pit-stop while exploring the harbor.

Highlights


Climb the Roof: Walk up the sloping marble ramps to the roof terrace for a 360-degree view of the Bjørvika skyline, the fjord, and the new Munch Museum. Beware, it might be slippery (or even closed) in rain or snow.
Find the "Floating Ice": Look into the water just off the Opera’s edge to see the sculpture She Lies, a chaotic pile of glass and steel that moves with the tide (it’s a modern take on Caspar David Friedrich’s painting The Sea of Ice).
The "Wave" Lobby: Even if you don't have tickets for a show, go inside the main lobby to see the oak architecture and the sunlight filtering through the massive 15-meter high windows.


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


0.8km
A chronological presentation of Norway's defence history situated inside Akershus Fortress, all for free.
0.9km
Walk the ramparts of a 700-year-old fortress, see where Norwegian kings and queens are buried, explore WWII resistance history in atmospheric museums, and watch sunset over Oslo's harbor from the best free viewpoint in the city.
1.0km
Experience the human story of Norwegian resistance during Nazi occupation (1940-1945) through atmospheric dark-to-light museum design, illegal newspapers hidden in firewood, saboteur equipment concealed in fish barrels, and the Heavy Water Sabotage that stopped Germany's nuclear program

Hotels nearby


0.5km
No reception staff. No lobby. No minibar. Self-check-in kiosk, clean room, central location, a price tag that barely exists by Oslo standards. Rooms are small and bare, but the bed is comfortable. Out all day and just need somewhere clean to collapse? This does exactly that.
0.5km
A well-equipped apartment with a washing machine and kitchenette, five minutes from Oslo Central Station.
0.5km
Oslo's biggest hotel. New and fresh. Rooftop bar with fjord views, three minutes from the airport train. Rooms are unremarkable chain-hotel fare. But the rooftop alone makes it a sharper pick than the faceless business hotels nearby, and the location is hard to fault for convenience.