Eight architectural highlights of Oslo

A journey through museums, libraries, and performance venues that reveal the soul of contemporary Norwegian cultural architecture. Iconic projects that masterfully connect context, landscape, and citizenship

estudioHerreros, New Munch Museum - Photo © Einar Aslaksen, courtesy estudioHerreros
estudioHerreros, New Munch Museum - Photo © Einar Aslaksen, courtesy estudioHerreros

In Oslo, cultural architecture has long served as a lens through which to understand the relationship between public space, landscape, and collective identity. Museums, libraries, and artistic production venues don’t merely house cultural functions; they actively contribute to shaping a city image built on openness, accessibility, and a thoughtful relationship with both natural and urban contexts. We have curated a selection of modern and contemporary cultural buildings that demonstrate how, in Norwegian architecture, the relationship with environmental conditions, local materials, and the quality of light remains an active design principle. As it transitioned into contemporary times, this approach found a pivotal figure in Sverre Fehn. These eight case studies thus present a nuanced panorama, where cultural architecture continues to be a fertile ground for experimentation and critical engagement with the city.

Snøhetta, Norwegian National Opera and Ballet - Photo © Helge Skodvin, courtesy Snøhetta
Snøhetta, Norwegian National Opera and Ballet – Photo © Helge Skodvin, courtesy Snøhetta

Snøhetta, Norwegian National Opera and Ballet
Designed by Snøhetta, the Norwegian National Opera and Ballet integrates into the Bjørvika waterfront more as an artificial landscape than an isolated building. Its sloping, walkable roof descends to the fjord, transforming the opera house into a vast public plaza. Expansive glass surfaces reveal the internal workings, opening the institution to the city.

Snøhetta, Skimuseet - Photo © Thomas Ekström, courtesy Snøhetta
Snøhetta, Skimuseet – Photo © Thomas Ekström, courtesy Snøhetta

Snøhetta, Skimuseet
In the design of the Skimuseet (Ski Museum) at Holmenkollen, Snøhetta further pushes the idea of architecture as a habitable surface and a landscape device. The museum largely develops below ground level, allowing only what is necessary to emerge and transforming the terrain into its roof. As with the Opera, the building doesn’t impose itself as an object, but redefines how one traverses and interprets the landscape.

Kleihues + Schuwerk, The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design - Photo © Iwan Baan, courtesy Kleihues + Schuwerk
Kleihues + Schuwerk, The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design – Photo © Iwan Baan, courtesy Kleihues + Schuwerk

Kleihues + Schuwerk, The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design
Designed by Kleihues + Schuwerk, the National Museum of Norway presents itself as a compact and measured architecture, where monumentality and formal control engage in dialogue with Oslo’s urban context. The building employs materiality and light as design principles, articulating a sequence of internal spaces conceived to guide visitors and connect diverse collections within a single cultural organism.

BIG, The Twist Museum - Photo © Laurian Ghinitoiu, courtesy BIG
BIG, The Twist Museum – Photo © Laurian Ghinitoiu, courtesy BIG

BIG, The Twist Museum
BIG’s The Twist Museum emerges as an architectural gesture that connects building and landscape, transforming a river crossing into a continuous spatial experience. The twisting of the volume is not merely formal; it responds to the varying site conditions, opening up shifting views of the valley and surrounding nature. The museum thus becomes a device that mediates between architecture, infrastructure, and territory.

estudioHerreros, New Munch Museum - Photo © Einar Aslaksen, courtesy estudioHerreros
estudioHerreros, New Munch Museum – Photo © Einar Aslaksen, courtesy estudioHerreros
A-works | architecture + art, Black Box Theater - Photo © Mattias F. Josefsson, courtesy A-works | architecture + art
A-works | architecture + art, Black Box Theater – Photo © Mattias F. Josefsson, courtesy A-works | architecture + art

estudioHerreros, New Munch Museum
The New Munch Museum redefines the relationship between cultural institution and city through a compact yet articulated volume that opens towards the Bjørvika waterfront. In estudioHerreros’ design, the building mass is punctuated by cuts, terraces, and intermediate spaces that interact with natural light and views, transforming the museum into an open and permeable urban organism.

A-works | architecture + art, Black Box Theater
The Black Box Theatre Foyer is a small space that expresses great intensity: more than just a foyer, it’s a place of transition and intersection between audience and performance. With a decisive material palette and sharp volumes, the project creates an intimate and dynamic spatial experience, making the threshold – between inside and out, between spectator and stage – the key element of a visit that ideally concludes our journey through Oslo’s cultural architecture.

Sverre Fehn, Norwegian Museum of Architecture - Photo © Davide Adamo
Sverre Fehn, Norwegian Museum of Architecture – Photo © Davide Adamo

Sverre Fehn, Norwegian Museum of Architecture
At the Norwegian Museum of Architecture, the master of Norwegian architecture, Sverre Fehn, translates into built form the profound relationship between architecture and environment that runs through Norwegian history. The pavilion subtly integrates among trees and existing structures, working with light, pathways, and materials. More than merely exhibiting architecture, the museum stages it as a spatial and sensory experience.

Atelier Oslo + Lund Hagem, Deichman Library - Photo © Einar Aslaksen, courtesy Atelier Oslo + Lund Hagem
Atelier Oslo + Lund Hagem, Deichman Library – Photo © Einar Aslaksen, courtesy Atelier Oslo + Lund Hagem

Atelier Oslo + Lund Hagem, Deichman Library
Architectural firms Atelier Oslo and Lund Hagem interpret the library as an open urban space: a building “to be explored,” inviting movement between levels and activities as if on a continuous journey. The volume cantilevers towards Bjørvika square, creating a covered threshold and a vantage point over the city.