This massive cultural village sits at Langkaia 1, just down the quay from the Opera House on the city side of the water. SALT is a permanent festival space built around giant triangular wooden fish-drying rack structures that look like architectural art installations. This is less "quiet Nordic sauna meditation" and more "party atmosphere with saunas attached." The complex includes two main saunas, food trucks, multiple bars, art installations, fire pits, DJ sets, and communal tables under massive tents.
Árdna is one of the world's largest saunas, holding up to 80 people inside a massive A-frame structure. Temperature runs milder at 60-70°C, making it comfortable for hanging out, drinking beer, and chatting. Skroget is the "serious" sauna, holding 20-30 people with higher heat (70-80°C). This is where sauna masters perform Aufguss rituals, pouring water with essential oils on rocks and waving towels to circulate heat. The performances are theatrical and intense.
A standard "Sauna Session" ticket gives you 2.5 hours of access to both main saunas plus included rituals. Prices vary by day and time, typically 300-400 NOK. Private rentals include The Barrels (100-year-old 7,000-liter sherry or aquavit barrels converted to saunas, fitting 4-8 people) and Naustet Sauna (a private hut for up to 6 people). Private barrel rentals start around 2,000 NOK.
Here's the massive catch: you cannot swim in the fjord here. Oslo council prohibits swimming from this dock due to boat traffic. Instead of the cold fjord plunge that defines every other sauna experience, SALT offers large cold water tanks and outdoor showers on the deck.
This place can be severely crowded, and cleanliness does not seem like a top priority. If you want quiet Nordic contemplation, this is the wrong venue. If you want a festival with saunas, this is perfect place, you go here for the party atmosphere. Bring slippers, towels and swimwear.
For fjord swimming and a quieter atmosphere, go to KOK Langkaia or Oslo Badstuforening Langkaia a stone throw away.
The food and drink setup is commercial festival-grade. Multiple bars sell beer, wine, and cider that you can take into the saunas in plastic cups. Food stalls serve wood-fired pizza, tacos, fish soup, and more. Long communal tables inside tents or around fire pits create the social atmosphere. Café Naustet is a cozy fireplace-lit space that feels like a 1950s Norwegian grandmother's cabin, serving coffee and waffles.