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16 of the best hotels in Norway

16 of the best hotels in Norway

Times8 hours ago

There's no shortage of variety when it comes to Norway's accommodation scene. Among our favourites are swanky, design-led hotels at the foot of mighty mountains; avant garde city escapes hugging the shores of bluer-than-blue fjords; fire-warmed log cabins secreted away in forests where reindeer roam; igloos freshly sculpted with the first dump of winter snow; and an ultra-luxe boutique hideaway with a Michelin-starred restaurant in its basement. Masters of reinvention, the Norwegians also love to breathe new life into old bones: cue 16th-century trading posts, fish warehouses, banks or barns reborn as glam places by venerable architects. Hotels here aren't cheap but, then again, you'll never forget seeing the rising sun illuminate a fretwork of fjords or the northern lights dancing above high Arctic peaks. This is our pick of the best hotels in Norway.
This article contains affiliate links, which may earn us revenue
£ | SPA | POOL | Best for a natural high
Perched atop Ronvikfjellet and rising high above the Arctic city of Bodo like a beacon of sustainability, Wood Hotel is a vision of Scandi-style, back-to-nature minimalism. Slotting neatly into the gorgeous surrounding landscape of snow-dusted peaks and forests, the hotel is constructed mainly from wood and powered by solar energy. It bills itself as an 'outdoor hotel' and rightly so, with trails threading up into the mountains, ebike rental and a nearby via ferrata — protected climbing route — to try. That's if you can drag yourself away from the hotel itself, which charms with its restaurant putting imaginative twists on revived Norwegian family recipes, eighth-floor heated outdoor pool gazing out over city, peak and fjord, and traditional steam sauna. Midnight sun or northern lights? You choose.
££ | SPA | POOL | Best for art deco ambience
Bringing a touch of glamour to Oslo's well-heeled Frogner neighbourhood, just steps from the Royal Palace, this addition to the Norwegian capital's hotel scene is a knockout. Behind the red-brick, 1930s façade of the city's former electrical company, the London and New York design practice GrecoDeco has worked wonders. Cue 231 rooms and suites that expertly weave together original features like wood panelling, chandeliers, patterned tiles, a palette of deep reds and greens and art deco patterns with contemporary simplicity and comfort. But you don't just come to sleep, you come for culture: in the hotel's library, its retro, gold-kissed cinema and its brasserie where jazz bands regularly play. Add to this a rooftop Norwegian-Japanese restaurant, street food and cocktail bar, a spa with sleep clinic, an outdoor pool with far-reaching views over city and fjord, and beautifully revamped public baths, festooned with Per Krohg's mosaics of swimming women and seals, and you are looking at one very special place to stay.
Read our full review of Sommerro
£££ | SPA | Best for rustic relaxation
Spread across a cluster of dark-timber, turf-roofed houses, on a hillside looking out across west-coast Storfjord and the Sunnmore Alps, Storfjord really couldn't be more Norwegian. Inside, the boutique retreat seduces with candles, fireplaces, an intimate spa with a forest-facing Jacuzzi, and a low-key gourmet restaurant bigging up local produce. The atmosphere in the nouveau-rustic rooms is as warm as a hug, with handcrafted log walls, muted colours, tweeds and down duvets. Borrow walking poles, fishing rods (there are some serious cod to catch in these waters), snowshoes and boats. Or find your own private nook to read, write, rest and dream.
• Discover our full guide to Norway
££ | Best for a woodland escape
Forget bending down on one knee and popping open a ring box: when Kjartan wanted to propose to the love of his life — Sally, from Sydney — he built her the treehouse of her wildest dreams. And so the seeds for this staggering retreat were sown. Perched like eyries in tall pines above the mountain-rimmed, sapphire-blue Hardanger Fjord and reached via a stiff uphill hike, these sustainable, wooden, shingle-clad tree houses in Odda have been designed to resemble Norwegian pine cones. Architects were brought in to help design the rustic-chic, black-alder interiors, with wraparound windows framing fjord views, handcrafted chairs and underfloor heating. Dreamiest of the lot are the mountaintop treehouses, which come with hand-carved wooden bathtubs, beds lowered from the ceiling, and sensational views over the forest canopy. Breakfast includes locally baked sourdough, eggs, juice and coffee.
woodnest.no
£££ | Best for food lovers
'Boutique' has become a bit of a catch-all, but Eilert Smith in the fjordside city of Stavanger really nails it: just 12 individually designed rooms echoing the building's 1930s architecture, and three-Michelin-star, 25-cover RE-NAA in the basement, riffing creatively on the finest seafood plucked from local waters. This is not just a hotel but an act of love — architects have aimed for the avant garde, but have carefully preserved original curves, geometric patterns and modernist materials, such as travertine, brass, marble and wood. Furniture is custom-made, colours are pure and the light streaming in through slim horizontal windows is quite special. Plump for the penthouse suite, spun around a spiral staircase and looking out across Stavanger harbour.
££ | SPA | POOL | Best for a superb spa
Hunkering down on the northern shore of slender Tingvoll fjord in western Norway, this charmingly whitewashed, timber-fronted hotel is a delicious slice of preserved heritage: it acted as a trading post back in the 1500s, when ships from Holland sailed here to buy timber. Most rooms have soothingly pretty views of the fjord and are classic in design — soft greys and creams, warm lighting and tarted-up antiques. The restaurant is more of a traditional, woody affair, with a chef taking pride in local sourcing from nearby farms and fjords. The clincher, however, is Badehuset Spa, lodged in a converted, glass-walled 18th-century granary overlooking the fjord, with hot baths, a sauna and luscious treatments.
£££ | Best for seaside style
On a peninsula slinging its hook into the North Sea, Alesund is one of Norway's most vibrant and fetching port towns, with a parade of gabled, candy-coloured art nouveau houses casting mirror images in the Brosundet canal. An intimate, family-run affair, this reimagined fishing warehouse combines one-of-a-kind architecture with minimalist edge and contemporary elegance. A huge fire blazes away in the lobby, which soars up to a central gallery, and rooms riff modern on the Nordic look in charcoals, chocolates and whites, with hints of the building's original flair in arched windows and exposed beams. They've thought of the lot: a corner café for locally brewed coffee, much-lauded restaurant Apotekergata No 5 serving just-caught seafood, a cocktail bar and a glam fitness and wellness area. Romance-wise, it has to be room 47 in Molja Lighthouse at the end of the jetty.
£££ | Best for city life
An ode to the 19th-century Norwegian composer and pianist Edvard Grieg, this modern classic hotel is run by his descendants. Originally Bergen's swankiest bank, the building echoes its past with marble columns, polished granite and weighty chandeliers, while taking a definite leap into more contemporary waters with sleek furnishings, bespoke wall coverings and occasional flashes of punchy colour. You're right in the heart of things here on Vagsallmenningen, one of Bergen's most photogenic squares, just paces from historic Bryggen waterfront, the fish market and the funicular trundling up to Mount Floyen. The handsome brasserie delivers afternoon tea with a splash of sophistication, while on Sunday evenings the bar swings to live jazz.
• Best places to visit in Norway• Great hotels in Oslo
££ | Best for a sense of history
Walaker reclines dream-like on the shores of Lustrafjord, which reaches out a startlingly blue finger to touch the high, glaciated peaks of Jotunheimen and Jostedalsbreen national parks. It's here that you'll find Norway's oldest hotel — run by the Nitter family since 1690, it's a historic retreat that doesn't give a damn about the 21st century. The cream-timber villa sits in lush floral gardens spilling down to the fjord, and rooms charm with heritage wall coverings and heavy antique furnishings. Dinner — served at 7.30pm sharp — is a set-menu feast of fjord-fished seafood, forest venison, mushrooms and fruits. Old-fashioned and insanely idyllic, Walaker Hotel is somewhere you'll remember and rave about for ever.
£££ | SPA | POOL | Best for five-star luxury
Trondheim is Norway's historic city poster-child, with its heart-stealing fjord setting, upbeat vibe and flurry of great restaurants, cafés and museums. Do it in style by staying at the Britannia, which opened its doors in 1870 to attract British aristocrats off to fish for the world's best salmon. Looking dashing after a top-to-toe makeover, its rooms evoke a Nordic winter in silvers, whites and greys, with handcrafted Hastens beds and Carrara marble bathrooms. Top billing, if budget is irrelevant, goes to the vast, extravagantly opulent Tower Suite, with its own grand piano and butler kitchen. After a romp around town, the skylit Palmehaven (for afternoon tea), domed spa, Michelin-starred restaurant and dark, sexy wine cellar await.
£££ | SPA | POOL | Best for boutique style
A burst of dark, new-Nordic glamour on Tjuvholmen ('Thief Island'), right opposite the Renzo Piano-designed Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, the Thief is Oslo's hottest boutique ticket. Nordic architects, interior designers and curators conjured up this wonder in glass and granite, filling it with nooks, flattering light, rich colours and eye-grabbing works by Damien Hirst and Jeff Koons. Gold-kissed rooms with floor-to-ceiling windows capture the light and moods of Oslofjord, the rooftop restaurant plays up inventive, season-driven cuisine, and the backlit spa and grotto-like pool make this hands-down Norway's sexiest city escape.
Read our full review of The Thief
££ | Best for a base in the wilderness
As the final frontier before the North Pole, Svalbard is where Norway takes a serious turn for the wilder — an archipelago home to more polar bears than people. The final flicker of civilisation is Longyearbyen on the island of Spitsbergen, the world's northernmost settlement. In winter, this is a wondrous place of bone-chilling cold and stark beauty, best seen by dog sled or snowmobile as the aurora flashes away in the sky. Conservation-focused Basecamp Explorer is a cracking base, designed like a modern-rustic trapper's lodge, with rooms filled with driftwood, sealskins, maps and pictures of explorers, and a snug lounge for post-expedition chilling. Better still, they arrange all kinds of fun, from glacier hikes to dog-sledding and multi-day snowmobile trips into the Arctic proper.
££ | Best for great hospitality
Out on a limb, Roisheim sits on the cusp of Jotunheimen National Park, where glaciers glint atop dark, fang-like mountains and Norway's highest peak — 2,469m (8,100ft) Galdhopiggen — rises. Set discreetly between the pleats and folds of forested slopes, this reborn 19th-century coaching inn enchants with 14 tar-painted, turf-roofed, timber houses — all faithfully restored with features such as fireplaces, hand-painted four-poster beds and wooden bathtubs. Artists, playwrights, weary travellers and mountaineers have long flocked here for warm hospitality, big wilderness and food that sings heartily of the seasons — a winning mix.
£££ | Best for a real igloo experience
In Alta in the high Arctic, the aurora regularly dances in clear night skies — as you might expect from the town that is home to the Northern Lights Cathedral. In the snows of winter, from late December to early April, Sorrisniva is magical. Ice sculptors are drafted in to handcraft its igloos, where you can spend a surprisingly comfortable night in a reindeer hide-draped ice bed after a day snowshoeing, tobogganing, or dog or reindeer sledding. There's even a chance to get crafty and hook onto a two-hour crash course in ice sculpting. Grog at the ice bar warms you up nicely for dinners expertly knocked up with locally sourced reindeer, moose, seafood and wild berries. Should you be planning to tie the knot, there's even an ice chapel. Igloos fully booked? Retreat to the Scandi-chic Arctic Wilderness Lodge instead.
£££ | Best for brilliant views
More nature-inspired art installation than hotel, Juvet is beautifully caught between mountain and fjord. Floor-to-ceiling glass walls act as the frame for changing lights, weathers and entrancing views over forested slopes and the Valldola River. The log houses are contemporary, monochrome and purist in design: from cubic, stilt-perched 'Landscape Rooms' to tinier, simpler 'Bird Houses'. The stripped-back look and lack of curtains is intentional so as not to detract from the wonder of the outdoors; for more space and luxury, book the Writer's Lodge. After skiing, rafting or soul-searching hiking, return to the cocoon-like warmth of the riverside bathhouse and eat incredibly well in the revamped century-old cow barn.
juvet.com
£££ | Best for icy beauty
Far north of the Arctic Circle, this eco-minded fantasy escape sits in a ludicrously beautiful spot, where the dark Finnmark Alps whoosh up above steel-blue Jokelfjord and a glacier calves directly into the sea. If the setting is dramatic, the modern-day glass igloos, or geodesic domes, are coolly understated in true Scandi style: icy palettes of blues and greys, goose-down duvets, slickly designed furniture, wood-fired stoves, telescopes and vast windows for fjord, star and northern lights gazing. After a day boating out to the glacier, whale watching, dog sledding or ski touring, your hosts whip up feasts of local reindeer, fish and berries. Oh, and did we mention the sauna and outdoor hot tub by the sea? Isbreen is open year round, but it's pure Narnia in winter.
isbreentheglacier.com
Additional reporting by Kerry Christiani and Richard Mellor
• Best things to do in Norway• Best northern lights tours
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16 of the best hotels in Norway
16 of the best hotels in Norway

Times

time8 hours ago

  • Times

16 of the best hotels in Norway

There's no shortage of variety when it comes to Norway's accommodation scene. Among our favourites are swanky, design-led hotels at the foot of mighty mountains; avant garde city escapes hugging the shores of bluer-than-blue fjords; fire-warmed log cabins secreted away in forests where reindeer roam; igloos freshly sculpted with the first dump of winter snow; and an ultra-luxe boutique hideaway with a Michelin-starred restaurant in its basement. Masters of reinvention, the Norwegians also love to breathe new life into old bones: cue 16th-century trading posts, fish warehouses, banks or barns reborn as glam places by venerable architects. Hotels here aren't cheap but, then again, you'll never forget seeing the rising sun illuminate a fretwork of fjords or the northern lights dancing above high Arctic peaks. This is our pick of the best hotels in Norway. This article contains affiliate links, which may earn us revenue £ | SPA | POOL | Best for a natural high Perched atop Ronvikfjellet and rising high above the Arctic city of Bodo like a beacon of sustainability, Wood Hotel is a vision of Scandi-style, back-to-nature minimalism. Slotting neatly into the gorgeous surrounding landscape of snow-dusted peaks and forests, the hotel is constructed mainly from wood and powered by solar energy. It bills itself as an 'outdoor hotel' and rightly so, with trails threading up into the mountains, ebike rental and a nearby via ferrata — protected climbing route — to try. That's if you can drag yourself away from the hotel itself, which charms with its restaurant putting imaginative twists on revived Norwegian family recipes, eighth-floor heated outdoor pool gazing out over city, peak and fjord, and traditional steam sauna. Midnight sun or northern lights? You choose. ££ | SPA | POOL | Best for art deco ambience Bringing a touch of glamour to Oslo's well-heeled Frogner neighbourhood, just steps from the Royal Palace, this addition to the Norwegian capital's hotel scene is a knockout. Behind the red-brick, 1930s façade of the city's former electrical company, the London and New York design practice GrecoDeco has worked wonders. Cue 231 rooms and suites that expertly weave together original features like wood panelling, chandeliers, patterned tiles, a palette of deep reds and greens and art deco patterns with contemporary simplicity and comfort. But you don't just come to sleep, you come for culture: in the hotel's library, its retro, gold-kissed cinema and its brasserie where jazz bands regularly play. Add to this a rooftop Norwegian-Japanese restaurant, street food and cocktail bar, a spa with sleep clinic, an outdoor pool with far-reaching views over city and fjord, and beautifully revamped public baths, festooned with Per Krohg's mosaics of swimming women and seals, and you are looking at one very special place to stay. Read our full review of Sommerro £££ | SPA | Best for rustic relaxation Spread across a cluster of dark-timber, turf-roofed houses, on a hillside looking out across west-coast Storfjord and the Sunnmore Alps, Storfjord really couldn't be more Norwegian. Inside, the boutique retreat seduces with candles, fireplaces, an intimate spa with a forest-facing Jacuzzi, and a low-key gourmet restaurant bigging up local produce. The atmosphere in the nouveau-rustic rooms is as warm as a hug, with handcrafted log walls, muted colours, tweeds and down duvets. Borrow walking poles, fishing rods (there are some serious cod to catch in these waters), snowshoes and boats. Or find your own private nook to read, write, rest and dream. • Discover our full guide to Norway ££ | Best for a woodland escape Forget bending down on one knee and popping open a ring box: when Kjartan wanted to propose to the love of his life — Sally, from Sydney — he built her the treehouse of her wildest dreams. And so the seeds for this staggering retreat were sown. Perched like eyries in tall pines above the mountain-rimmed, sapphire-blue Hardanger Fjord and reached via a stiff uphill hike, these sustainable, wooden, shingle-clad tree houses in Odda have been designed to resemble Norwegian pine cones. Architects were brought in to help design the rustic-chic, black-alder interiors, with wraparound windows framing fjord views, handcrafted chairs and underfloor heating. Dreamiest of the lot are the mountaintop treehouses, which come with hand-carved wooden bathtubs, beds lowered from the ceiling, and sensational views over the forest canopy. Breakfast includes locally baked sourdough, eggs, juice and coffee. £££ | Best for food lovers 'Boutique' has become a bit of a catch-all, but Eilert Smith in the fjordside city of Stavanger really nails it: just 12 individually designed rooms echoing the building's 1930s architecture, and three-Michelin-star, 25-cover RE-NAA in the basement, riffing creatively on the finest seafood plucked from local waters. This is not just a hotel but an act of love — architects have aimed for the avant garde, but have carefully preserved original curves, geometric patterns and modernist materials, such as travertine, brass, marble and wood. Furniture is custom-made, colours are pure and the light streaming in through slim horizontal windows is quite special. Plump for the penthouse suite, spun around a spiral staircase and looking out across Stavanger harbour. ££ | SPA | POOL | Best for a superb spa Hunkering down on the northern shore of slender Tingvoll fjord in western Norway, this charmingly whitewashed, timber-fronted hotel is a delicious slice of preserved heritage: it acted as a trading post back in the 1500s, when ships from Holland sailed here to buy timber. Most rooms have soothingly pretty views of the fjord and are classic in design — soft greys and creams, warm lighting and tarted-up antiques. The restaurant is more of a traditional, woody affair, with a chef taking pride in local sourcing from nearby farms and fjords. The clincher, however, is Badehuset Spa, lodged in a converted, glass-walled 18th-century granary overlooking the fjord, with hot baths, a sauna and luscious treatments. £££ | Best for seaside style On a peninsula slinging its hook into the North Sea, Alesund is one of Norway's most vibrant and fetching port towns, with a parade of gabled, candy-coloured art nouveau houses casting mirror images in the Brosundet canal. An intimate, family-run affair, this reimagined fishing warehouse combines one-of-a-kind architecture with minimalist edge and contemporary elegance. A huge fire blazes away in the lobby, which soars up to a central gallery, and rooms riff modern on the Nordic look in charcoals, chocolates and whites, with hints of the building's original flair in arched windows and exposed beams. They've thought of the lot: a corner café for locally brewed coffee, much-lauded restaurant Apotekergata No 5 serving just-caught seafood, a cocktail bar and a glam fitness and wellness area. Romance-wise, it has to be room 47 in Molja Lighthouse at the end of the jetty. £££ | Best for city life An ode to the 19th-century Norwegian composer and pianist Edvard Grieg, this modern classic hotel is run by his descendants. Originally Bergen's swankiest bank, the building echoes its past with marble columns, polished granite and weighty chandeliers, while taking a definite leap into more contemporary waters with sleek furnishings, bespoke wall coverings and occasional flashes of punchy colour. You're right in the heart of things here on Vagsallmenningen, one of Bergen's most photogenic squares, just paces from historic Bryggen waterfront, the fish market and the funicular trundling up to Mount Floyen. The handsome brasserie delivers afternoon tea with a splash of sophistication, while on Sunday evenings the bar swings to live jazz. • Best places to visit in Norway• Great hotels in Oslo ££ | Best for a sense of history Walaker reclines dream-like on the shores of Lustrafjord, which reaches out a startlingly blue finger to touch the high, glaciated peaks of Jotunheimen and Jostedalsbreen national parks. It's here that you'll find Norway's oldest hotel — run by the Nitter family since 1690, it's a historic retreat that doesn't give a damn about the 21st century. The cream-timber villa sits in lush floral gardens spilling down to the fjord, and rooms charm with heritage wall coverings and heavy antique furnishings. Dinner — served at 7.30pm sharp — is a set-menu feast of fjord-fished seafood, forest venison, mushrooms and fruits. Old-fashioned and insanely idyllic, Walaker Hotel is somewhere you'll remember and rave about for ever. £££ | SPA | POOL | Best for five-star luxury Trondheim is Norway's historic city poster-child, with its heart-stealing fjord setting, upbeat vibe and flurry of great restaurants, cafés and museums. Do it in style by staying at the Britannia, which opened its doors in 1870 to attract British aristocrats off to fish for the world's best salmon. Looking dashing after a top-to-toe makeover, its rooms evoke a Nordic winter in silvers, whites and greys, with handcrafted Hastens beds and Carrara marble bathrooms. Top billing, if budget is irrelevant, goes to the vast, extravagantly opulent Tower Suite, with its own grand piano and butler kitchen. After a romp around town, the skylit Palmehaven (for afternoon tea), domed spa, Michelin-starred restaurant and dark, sexy wine cellar await. £££ | SPA | POOL | Best for boutique style A burst of dark, new-Nordic glamour on Tjuvholmen ('Thief Island'), right opposite the Renzo Piano-designed Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, the Thief is Oslo's hottest boutique ticket. Nordic architects, interior designers and curators conjured up this wonder in glass and granite, filling it with nooks, flattering light, rich colours and eye-grabbing works by Damien Hirst and Jeff Koons. Gold-kissed rooms with floor-to-ceiling windows capture the light and moods of Oslofjord, the rooftop restaurant plays up inventive, season-driven cuisine, and the backlit spa and grotto-like pool make this hands-down Norway's sexiest city escape. Read our full review of The Thief ££ | Best for a base in the wilderness As the final frontier before the North Pole, Svalbard is where Norway takes a serious turn for the wilder — an archipelago home to more polar bears than people. The final flicker of civilisation is Longyearbyen on the island of Spitsbergen, the world's northernmost settlement. In winter, this is a wondrous place of bone-chilling cold and stark beauty, best seen by dog sled or snowmobile as the aurora flashes away in the sky. Conservation-focused Basecamp Explorer is a cracking base, designed like a modern-rustic trapper's lodge, with rooms filled with driftwood, sealskins, maps and pictures of explorers, and a snug lounge for post-expedition chilling. Better still, they arrange all kinds of fun, from glacier hikes to dog-sledding and multi-day snowmobile trips into the Arctic proper. ££ | Best for great hospitality Out on a limb, Roisheim sits on the cusp of Jotunheimen National Park, where glaciers glint atop dark, fang-like mountains and Norway's highest peak — 2,469m (8,100ft) Galdhopiggen — rises. Set discreetly between the pleats and folds of forested slopes, this reborn 19th-century coaching inn enchants with 14 tar-painted, turf-roofed, timber houses — all faithfully restored with features such as fireplaces, hand-painted four-poster beds and wooden bathtubs. Artists, playwrights, weary travellers and mountaineers have long flocked here for warm hospitality, big wilderness and food that sings heartily of the seasons — a winning mix. £££ | Best for a real igloo experience In Alta in the high Arctic, the aurora regularly dances in clear night skies — as you might expect from the town that is home to the Northern Lights Cathedral. In the snows of winter, from late December to early April, Sorrisniva is magical. Ice sculptors are drafted in to handcraft its igloos, where you can spend a surprisingly comfortable night in a reindeer hide-draped ice bed after a day snowshoeing, tobogganing, or dog or reindeer sledding. There's even a chance to get crafty and hook onto a two-hour crash course in ice sculpting. Grog at the ice bar warms you up nicely for dinners expertly knocked up with locally sourced reindeer, moose, seafood and wild berries. Should you be planning to tie the knot, there's even an ice chapel. Igloos fully booked? Retreat to the Scandi-chic Arctic Wilderness Lodge instead. £££ | Best for brilliant views More nature-inspired art installation than hotel, Juvet is beautifully caught between mountain and fjord. Floor-to-ceiling glass walls act as the frame for changing lights, weathers and entrancing views over forested slopes and the Valldola River. The log houses are contemporary, monochrome and purist in design: from cubic, stilt-perched 'Landscape Rooms' to tinier, simpler 'Bird Houses'. The stripped-back look and lack of curtains is intentional so as not to detract from the wonder of the outdoors; for more space and luxury, book the Writer's Lodge. After skiing, rafting or soul-searching hiking, return to the cocoon-like warmth of the riverside bathhouse and eat incredibly well in the revamped century-old cow barn. £££ | Best for icy beauty Far north of the Arctic Circle, this eco-minded fantasy escape sits in a ludicrously beautiful spot, where the dark Finnmark Alps whoosh up above steel-blue Jokelfjord and a glacier calves directly into the sea. If the setting is dramatic, the modern-day glass igloos, or geodesic domes, are coolly understated in true Scandi style: icy palettes of blues and greys, goose-down duvets, slickly designed furniture, wood-fired stoves, telescopes and vast windows for fjord, star and northern lights gazing. After a day boating out to the glacier, whale watching, dog sledding or ski touring, your hosts whip up feasts of local reindeer, fish and berries. Oh, and did we mention the sauna and outdoor hot tub by the sea? Isbreen is open year round, but it's pure Narnia in winter. Additional reporting by Kerry Christiani and Richard Mellor • Best things to do in Norway• Best northern lights tours What's your favourite hotel in Norway? Please share in the comments below

British Airways trial introducing a major change to in-flight drinks
British Airways trial introducing a major change to in-flight drinks

Daily Mail​

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

British Airways trial introducing a major change to in-flight drinks

British Airways have introduced a controversial change to in-flight drinks as part of a sustainability trial. Economy passengers travelling from London 's Heathrow Airport to three major US cities, Miami, Boston and Los Angeles, will no longer be provided with water bottles while onboard. Instead, those travelling on the select routes will be served paper cups of water in a bit to 'reduce plastic waste'. The change does not affect BA's Club World and first class passengers. On a FlyerTalk forum, a passenger travelling from Miami to London's Heathrow was highly critical of the new trial, describing it as a 'cost-saving exercise under the guise of saving the polar bears'. Stating that they were 'not a happy camper', they added: 'All I asked for was a bottle of water and the response astounded me. I thought I had heard it all. Clearly not. 'I was told there were no bottles of water they could give me as BA is trialling not offering any bottles of water. Unbelievable'. British Airways confirmed that they are running the one-week trial reducing single-use plastic onboard from June 16 to June 22. A spokesperson for the airline said: 'This is a one-week trial on three routes as part of efforts to reduce plastic waste. The views of our customers are very important to us, and we'll be listening very carefully to their feedback.' It comes after British Airways controversially chose to stop serving three-course meals in its business cabin for late takeoffs in October last year, sparking significant backlash from seasoned flyers. Starters were completely stripped from the menu, while the choice of main courses and deserts was also significantly scaled back. A source close to British Airways says it cut three course meals on its Club World departures after 9pm to help passengers sleep on late-night flights. In a similar move to other airlines, they said most passengers had already eaten in the Club Lounge - and found that at that time of night most customers wanted to sleep rather than eat. However, several BA passengers were upset by the move - and expressed their disapproval at the decision. One said: 'I would love to see the amount saved per passenger from these cost cutting measures. It surely cannot be worth the damage?!' Another hit out about the 'cost cutting exercise by BA'. British Airways confirmed that they are running the one-week trial reducing single-use plastic onboard from June 16 to June 22 (file image) He added: 'Just because I am flying after 9pm from Miami doesn't mean that I want to sleep. 'If I want to drink I will – problem is now there is very little food to go with it. 'I guess they don't want the crew to work too hard.' A spokesperson for British Airways said: 'We're incredibly proud of our premium dining experience, which includes a wide range of meal options to suit the preferences of our customers depending on the time of day they're travelling. 'We trialled our new brunch offering with thousands of customers across numerous routes and received extremely positive feedback on both the quality and variety of options offered.'

British Airways trials removing individual water bottles from flights
British Airways trials removing individual water bottles from flights

The Independent

time2 days ago

  • The Independent

British Airways trials removing individual water bottles from flights

British Airways is trialling removing water bottles from in-flight drinks services as part of 'efforts to reduce plastic waste'. Economy passengers on long-haul flights connecting London Heathrow with three US cities – Miami, Boston, and Los Angeles – will instead be served cups of water as part of the new sustainability trial. Paper cups provided by cabin crew have temporarily replaced individual plastic water bottles on these select routes for travellers in BA 's economy and premium economy cabins. On a FlyerTalk forum, a passenger flying from Miami to Heathrow said: 'There were no bottles of water they could give me as BA is trialling not offering any bottles of water for two weeks now.' They added that the individual water cuts were 'obviously a cost-saving exercise under the guise of saving the polar bears'. The airline confirmed that a one-week trial reducing single-use plastic onboard is running between 16 and 22 June. BA's Club World and first class passengers are not currently impacted by the experimental plastic bottle ban. A spokesperson for British Airways told The Independent: 'This is a one-week trial on three routes as part of efforts to reduce plastic waste. The views of our customers are very important to us, and we'll be listening very carefully to their feedback.' In October 2024, BA was accused of scrambling to cut costs by frequent flyers after introducing a new brunch service on long-haul flights. The extended breakfast for lunch meals are served on flights that depart between 8.30am and 11.29am. Menu items for the primary inflight meal across seat categories now include cheese frittatas, Belgian waffles and poached eggs on sourdough, rather than a full meal. Several frequent flyers said they considered the changes 'cheap' and a 'major downgrade' of the service. BA said the new brunch service was implemented in line with positive customer feedback on classic brunch dishes and lighter lunch options.

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