Rooms and apartments
near the New Oslo Opera House
The new Oslo Opera House has become one of the main attractions in Oslo, visitited by more than 1,3 million people the first year after its opening. The floor area of the base of the building is equivalent to four international standard football fields and measures more than 38,000 square metres. The building boasts three stages and a total of 1,100 rooms.
Our rooms and apartments are located just a short walk from this magnificent building. From the apartment building, simply cross the new railway bridge and the Barcode area and you'll see the Opera in approximately 10 minutes. Our flats and rooms are also centrally located near the Oslo main station, the Munch Museum, the main street Karl Johan and several other tourist attractions in Oslo.
We aim to keep our prices for our rooms and aparments significally lower than the price you would pay in a hotel or hostel in the same area.
Our rooms:
Budget room for rent - near central station
Room for rent - cheapest room in the Oslo city centre?
Stylish room for rent in central Oslo
Our apartments:
Apartment for rent - Grunerløkka / Oslo city centre
Apartment for rent - near Munch museum / New Opera
More about the Oslo Opera House:
From www.visitoslo.com:
The Oslo Opera House (in Norwegian: Operahuset) is the home of the Norwegian National Opera and Ballet. Construction started in 2003 and the completed in 2007
.The floor area of the base of the building is equivalent to four international standard football fields and measures more than 38,000 square metres. The building boasts three stages and a total of 1,100 rooms.
The foyer is a huge open room with a minimalist décor, using simple materials such as stone, concrete, glass and wood. Here you find seating areas, bars and restaurants.
The main classical horseshoe shaped auditorium, which is one of the most technologically advanced in the world, offers great scenographic flexibility and fantastic acoustics. The stage area measures several thousand square metres and parts of it are as much as 16 metres below the surface of the water.
In contrast to the light foyer, the main auditorium is decorated in ammonia-treated Baltic oak. The seatbacks of the 1,350 seats contain individual screens with subtitles in eight different languages. Boat builders from the northwest coast of Norway have carved the balconies, and hanging from the ceiling is Norway’s largest circular chandelier. It is 7 metres in diameter, weighs 8 tons, has 5,800 crystal glass elements and was produced by the Norwegian firm Hadeland Glassverk.