Join this walking tour through Oslo, the city shaped by brilliant minds with big egos, workers with little to spare, artists permanently short on cash, and a river that has always kept the city moving.
Begin your walk at Our Saviour’s Cemetery, surrounded by old linden trees and birdsong, where some of Norway’s greatest cultural figures rest side by side. Ibsen, Bjørnson, Collett and Munch set the tone with stories of genius, rivalry, poverty and grand lives lived on empty pockets.
From there, continue to Telthusbakken and Damstredet, postcard-perfect streets that feel like stepping into another century full of colourful wooden houses, cobblestones and tales of labourers, washerwomen, bohemians and artists who traded paintings for coffee and cigars. The pace slows, the city exhales, and history feels close.
The walk then leads down to the Akerselva river, Oslo’s backbone. Once black with industry, now green and lively. Stories of factories, noise and hard labour blend seamlessly with today’s cafés, creativity and urban life. The tour ends at Vulkan, Mathallen and Blå, where modern Oslo meets its raw, alternative side. Old workshops have become food halls, bars and cultural spaces, filled with the scent of sourdough, spices and espresso instead of steam and sawdust.
This is a walking tour rich in stories, contrasts and dry humour, from geniuses and tailors to art, industry and coffee by the river.
