Wander a vast open-air museum of 160 historic Norwegian buildings — including a 12th-century stave church — and experience living demonstrations of Viking-age crafts, traditional costumes, and folk culture, guided by a private specialist.
What to expect
Set on the lush Bygdøy Peninsula, the museum's 14-hectare open-air site unfolds across meadows and forest paths. Costumed interpreters demonstrate butter-churning, folk dancing and traditional weaving in period farmsteads. The indoor gallery houses Norway's finest collection of Sami culture, folk art, and the apartment of playwright Henrik Ibsen, reconstructed to the last detail. In summer, a festive atmosphere fills the site with music and craft markets — it feels genuinely alive.
Good to know
Reach Bygdøy by the seasonal ferry from Aker Brygge (15 mins) — far more scenic than the bus. Combine with the Fram Museum and Kon-Tiki Museum on the same peninsula for a full Bygdøy cultural day. The Oslo Pass (NOK 580 / EUR 49) covers entry to all three museums and the ferry.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Oslo — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.