Sail across Isfjorden to Barentsburg, one of the world's most remote Russian settlements, where Soviet murals, a working coal mine, and a fiercely proud community of 400 Russian and Ukrainian residents defy the Arctic — and expectations.
What to expect
The 50-kilometre sea crossing through Isfjorden is itself a spectacle, with Svalbard's dramatic tundra coastline sliding past. In Barentsburg, a local Russian guide escorts you through the USSR-era settlement: Lenin still gazes from murals, the hotel bar serves vodka under a Soviet coat of arms, and children play in the shadow of an active coalmine. Visit the surprisingly rich local museum, peer into the greenhouse that battles to grow vegetables at 78°N, and absorb the surreal, geopolitically fascinating reality of Russian sovereignty in Norwegian waters.
Good to know
Round trip is approximately 7–8 hours by fast catamaran. Norwegian and Russian visa regulations do not apply to Svalbard — no extra paperwork needed. Bring NOK or EUR for the bar and museum shop. Book early; summer departures sell out.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Longyearbyen — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.