Norsk Folkemuseum
Norsk Folkemuseum – The Norwegian Museum of Cultural History
Norsk Folkemuseum is one of Norway’s largest and most comprehensive open-air museums, showcasing Norwegian cultural history, traditions, and folk life from the Middle Ages to modern times. Located on Bygdøy in Oslo, the museum features over 160 historic buildings, interactive exhibits, and live demonstrations, making it a must-visit destination for those interested in Norway’s rich heritage.
A Journey Through Norwegian History
Founded in 1894, Norsk Folkemuseum offers visitors an immersive experience into Norwegian life through the centuries, covering both rural and urban history. The museum highlights traditional wooden architecture, folk costumes, crafts, Sami culture, and daily life in Norway from various time periods.
Highlights of the Norsk Folkemuseum
1. Open-Air Museum with 160 Historic Buildings
🏡 Explore authentic farmhouses, churches, townhouses, and workshops from different parts of Norway.
⛪ Gol Stave Church (built around 1200) – One of Norway’s best-preserved stave churches, with stunning medieval carvings.
🚜 Rural Farms – Experience how Norwegian farmers, fishermen, and craftsmen lived centuries ago.
🏙 The Old Town of Oslo – Walk through reconstructed streets from 1600 to 1900, with shops, bakeries, and homes.
2. Traditional Norwegian Folk Life and Costumes
👗 Exhibits on bunads (traditional Norwegian folk costumes).
🛠 Handicrafts and old trades, including weaving, blacksmithing, and woodworking.
3. The Sami Collection
🦌 Discover the culture and lifestyle of Norway’s indigenous Sami people, including reindeer herding traditions and traditional Sami clothing (gákti).
4. Live Demonstrations and Events
🎭 Folk dancing, storytelling, and craft demonstrations during weekends and special seasons.
🍞 Traditional Norwegian baking – Taste homemade lefse and other local treats.
🎄 Christmas Market – A beloved annual event featuring Norwegian holiday traditions, crafts, and food.
Practical Information
📍 Location: Bygdøy, Oslo
🕒 Opening Hours: Vary by season (usually 10:00–17:00 in summer).
🎟 Tickets: Available at the entrance or online (free with Oslo Pass).
🚆 How to Get There:
Bus 30 from central Oslo to Bygdøy.
Fjord ferry from Aker Brygge to Bygdøy (summer only).
Why Visit Norsk Folkemuseum?
✅ Experience Norwegian history in an interactive, open-air setting.
✅ See Norway’s famous Gol Stave Church.
✅ Learn about Norwegian folk traditions, crafts, and Sami culture.
✅ Enjoy seasonal events, markets, and live performances.
✅ Great for families, history lovers, and culture enthusiasts.
Whether you want to step back in time, experience Norwegian rural life, or learn about traditional crafts and customs, Norsk Folkemuseum is a must-see in Oslo! 🇳🇴✨
About Norsk Folkemuseum
Norsk Folkemuseum shows how people lived in Norway from 1500 to the present through its collections from around the country.
Norsk Folkemuseum is Norway’s largest museum of cultural history. The 160 buildings in the Open-Air Museum represent different regions in Norway, different time periods, as well as differences between town and country, and social classes. The Gol Stave Church dating from 1200 is one of five medieval buildings at the museum. The contemporary history is presented through exhibitions and documentation projects. Permanent indoor exhibitions include folk art, folk costumes, toys and Sami culture. There is also a variety of temporary exhibitions and audience programs all year round.
What's on
EVERY DAY at 12.00 and 14.00
Winter tour of iconic Gol Stave Church
Experience two of our biggest attractions with our costumed guides, iconic Gol Stave Church and the beautiful Hovestua
The tour is in Norwegian and English, every day at 12.00 and 14.00
Meeting at Torget
PROGRAM 2025
February, March and April at Norsk Folkemuseum
Magical Winter Holiday
Easter Mystery at Norsk Folkemuseum
Highlights in the Open Air Museum
The Stave Church
The Setesdal Farm Stead
Rural life in the 18th century
The Apartment Building
Enerhaugen
Exhibitions
See all exhibitions
TIMESCAPE
1600-1914
FOLK DRESS
FOLK
ART
SAMI CULTURE
Café and shop
Café Arkadia and Piperviken café
Our café offers an informal atmosphere for your visit.
Museum Shop
With Norwegian and Nordic designs, and a selection of traditional souvenirs
Our Exhibitions
The varied exhibitions tell about daily life and living conditions in Norway from the 16th century to our own time, and show selected objects from the museum's rich collections.
The Christmas Exhibition is open until Sunday 12. January.
In the buildings around the square:
Folk dress
Timescape 1600-1914
Folk Art
Sami culture
The Museum Attic
Norwegian Clergy
Church Art
The Reformation
The Storting Chambers
Weapons
Knitting
The News Kiosk
In The Open Air Museum:
Finnmark
Farm Work
Living in the City
Domestic Technology
Painter and Decorator
The Dentist
The Pharmacy Museum
The History of the Museum
Norsk Folkemuseum was founded by Hans Aall in 1894. This time period was marked by strong national fervor and a desire for a more independent position in the union with Sweden. In 1898 the new museum was permanently established on the Bygdøy peninsula near Oslo, where the first comprehensive exhibit on cultural history was opened in 1901.
Norsk Folkemuseum 1914. Drawing from Aftenposten.
The first 52 years
1894 -1946
The Norwegian Museum of Cultural History – Norsk Folkemuseum – was founded in 1894 by Hans Aall (1869-1946), who went on to be its Director for 52 years. The aim was to demonstrate “how our fathers lived and toiled, how they battled with the unforgiving land and harsh conditions, cultivated the soil, brought home their catch, traded, carried out their craft, lived and dressed, brought up their children; and how their spiritual life was affected by the changing times, what they thought and what they believed”. This was to provide “an understanding of our national life and our cultural development, and a feeling of togetherness and interdependence”.
After some years in central Kristiania, the museum was moved to Bygdøy in 1902. The Open Air Museum was established with the farmhouses from Valle in Setesdal, Grøslistua and Raulandsstua from Numedal, and a loft and a storehouse from Telemark.
Oscar IIs Collection, 1885. Axel Lindahl | Norsk Folkemuseum
In 1907, the museum took charge of the King Oscar II Collection – the world’s first open air museum, established in 1881 – which included the stave church from Gol and the farmhouses Hovestua from Heddal and Kjellebergstua from Valle in Setesdal.
The various collections of artefacts were at first displayed in temporary buildings, but in 1914 the Town Section was opened. This showcased furniture and household effects from urban Norwegian homes including those of senior officials, presenting the evolving interior design from the 1600s to around 1800. It also included original interiors from Arendal, Solør, Drammen and Christiania.
In 1903, the museum acquired a two-storey farmhouse known as a barfrøstue from Stor-Elvdal, as well as a summer cabin from Åmot. Both were erected in the space of two years. Farmhouses from Vang in Valdres, Heddal in Telemark and Flå in Hallingdal followed suit. In 1913, the Kjellebergstua was moved from the Oscar II Collection to the Setesdal farmstead. Farmhouses from Flesberg in Numedal and Stryn in Nordfjord were erected in 1914. November 1915 saw the presentation by the museum of a plan for a new section of the Open Air Museum – the Old Town. This section, containing the Barthe Town House from Kragerø and the Town House from Tollbugata 14 in Oslo, was opened to the public in 1930.
In 1938, new exhibition buildings designed by the architects Bjercke and Eliassen were completed, facing the market square. In 1935, the Church and Rural Arts Section was opened, and over the next few years exhibitions of industrial art and craft, agriculture, home crafts, vehicles - motorised and otherwise - musical instruments and toys were opened.
Norsk Folkemuseum
In 1941, Hans Aall launched the so-called “15 farmsteads plan”. In addition to the dwelling houses, the Open Air Museum was to show complete farmsteads, including many different types of outhouse. In total six farmsteads, from Setesdal, Østerdalen, Numedal, Hallingdal, Telemark and Hardanger, were brought together.
The next 43 years
1946 – 1989
Hans Aall died in 1946, and Reidar Kjellberg (1904-1977) took over as Museum Director. Kjellberg, an art historian, had been working at the museum since 1934, and had for several years been the museum’s Assistant Director. Kjellberg was a visionary, innovative and forward-looking man, who immediately put all his force and energy into the job of Director.
Initiatives to delight and involve the public were launched, such as folk dance performances, sheep shearing and bicycle parades. Co-operation with schools was extended. Last but not least, Reidar Kjellberg strove to turn the museum into a research institution, and to develop its archives and the collection of artefacts.
As a part of the celebration of Oslo’s 900th anniversary in 1950, the museum unveiled the exhibition “Daily life in Oslo from the Reformation to the Present”. The entire Town Section was emptied and totally rebuilt. The aim of the exhibition was to “give an impression of the city’s cultural history from the 1500s to 1950” – and it included furnished rooms from different periods and social strata, concluding with a completely modern living room .
The Sámi collections were transferred from the Ethnographic Museum to Norsk Folkemuseum in 1951, and a permanent exhibition of Sámi culture was opened in 1958.
During the 1960s, the Old Town was extended with five small houses from the suburb of Enerhaugen. The town house Chrystiegården from Brevik, which had been transferred to the museum in 1916, was opened to the public in 1971, and the grocery shop from Oslo opened in 1975.
Town House from Kirkegata 15 Anne-Lise Reinsfelt | Norsk Folkemuseum
The historian Halvard Bjørkvik (b. 1924) became the new Museum Director in 1975. During his tenure, approximately 7500 artefacts – a large part of the “Norwegian Collection” from the Nordic Museum in Stockholm – were transferred to Norsk Folkemuseum. These were artefacts collected in Norway at the end of the 19th century, and included Norwegian rose painting and wood carving, mangle boards, chests, cupboards, sleighs and harnesses, candlesticks and dishes. A selection of the artefacts was displayed in the exhibition “Culture Repatriated” (Kultur i retur), which opened in 1988 in a recently erected exhibition building called Vognremissen.
During the 1980s, several other buildings in the Open Air Museum were completed. These included the 1860s school house from Natås in Hordaland and the warehouse from Rødfyllgata 12 at Vaterland, which had housed a café for the unemployed in the 1930s. Now it was the turn of the museum craftsmen (including silversmiths and potters) to move in.
Work began on re-erecting the chapel Bethlehem from Hinna on Jæren (completed in 1992), and the rebuilding of the large, elegant town house Collettgården – once one of Christiania’s most exclusive residences – was finally completed.
The new Visiting Centre, opened in 1994. Haakon Harriss | Norsk Folkemuseum
The last 30 years
1989 - 2019
Between 1990 and 2000, the museum’s Director was Erik Rudeng (b. 1946). This was an eventful decade, when the museum concentrated much of its effort on temporary exhibitions, collections management and research.
Big thematic exhibitions were unveiled: “The Arcadian Dream” (1994), “Daily Life during WWII” (1995), “Nansen” (1996), “Germany and Scandinavia” (1998) and Sophie’s World (1999). Two new permanent exhibitions were also opened: “Norwegian Folk Art” (1993) and “Folk Dress” (1994).
A new central storage facility for the museum was built, the artefact and picture catalogues were digitised, and between 1995 and 2000, with support from the Research Council of Norway, the museum managed the large networked project “Man and the Living Environment”, in which several museums and university research institutes participated.
The Apartment Building from Wessels gate 15 in Oslo. Opening yearly 2001-2009- Anne-Lise Reinsfelt | Norsk Folkemuseum
Olav Aaraas (b. 1950) has been Director of the museum since 2001. Projects of the new millennium include: refurbishment of the museum restaurant, with the new name of Gjestestuene (2005); a new open air amenity with a large amphitheatre (2006); reconstruction of the home of Henrik Ibsen and a new permanent exhibition at the Ibsen Museum (2006); the fitting out of the “OBOS-tenement building – Wesselsgate 15” (completed in 2009); the renovation of the Trøndelag farmstead – “Trøndelag 1959” – (completed in 2011) and of Enerhaugen (2011-12).
During this period there were also several thematic exhibitions, including “Neighbours for a Thousand Years” (2004), “Norwegians and Swedes” and “Norway in Denmark” (2005), “Nothing Disappears” (2007), “Back to the ’80s” (2009), “The 1950s revisited” (2010), “Norway 1910 – in Colour” (2011), “Devoted Women” (2013), “1814 – a Norwegian Drama” (2014) and “Norway by Photographer Wilse” (2015).
From its establishment in 1894, Norsk Folkemuseum was owned by a members’ association, but in 1990 the museum became a wholly-owned foundation with a friends’ association.
Since 2016, the museum has been part of the Norsk Folkemuseum Foundation, which also includes the Bygdø Royal Manor (from 2004), Eidsvoll 1814 with Eidsvoll Manor House and Wergeland’s House (from 2009), and the Norwegian Maritime Museum (from 2015). In addition, the consolidated museum includes the Bogstad Manor in Sørkedalen, and the Ibsen Museum in Arbinsgate.
Since 2016, Olav Aaraas has been the Director of the Norsk Folkemuseum Foundation, and Inger Jensen (Chief Curator 2002-2015) the Director of Norsk Folkemuseum.
Norsk Folkemuseum
Museumsveien 10, Bygdøy0287 Oslo, Norway
Phone (+47) 22 12 37 00
e-mail post@norskfolkemuseum.no