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The island of Manshausen, surrounded by a boat and turquoise waters, with cloud-covered mountains in the background
Manshausen Island, with two new black solar-powered towers, bottom left, and the white sea cabins (Photo: Courtesy Adrien Giret)
Friday Fantasy

These Are the Most Stunning Coastal Cabins in Norway

At Manshausen, on Norway鈥檚 Arctic coast, adventurer B酶rge Ousland makes sure nature is part of every experience. Fish for fresh cod, fall asleep beneath the northern lights, and discover why hygge is key to happiness.

Published: 
Manshausen Island, surrounded by turquoise waters and cloud-covered mountains in the distance
(Photo: Courtesy Adrien Giret)

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Ever come across an incredible hotel聽that stops you mid-scroll and makes you think, Wow, wouldn鈥檛 it be something to stay there?We do, too鈥攁ll the time. Welcome to Friday Fantasy, where we highlight amazing hotels, lodges, cabins, tents, campsites, and other places perched in perfect outdoor settings. Read on for聽the intel you need to book an upcoming adventure here. Or at least dream about it.

Why We Love Manshausen

A pastel-colored sunset view over the waterfront and mountains. You can see a person relaxing with socks on, holding a glass of wine.
The evening view from the cabins is worth the trip. (Photo: Courtesy Alfonso Petrirena)

B酶rge Ousland was the first person to cross Antarctica solo and part of the first duo to reach the North Pole during the darkness of winter. Which means he鈥檚 spent a lot of time shivering in a tent, envisioning a cozier place to sleep. In 2010 the legendary explorer turned his dreams into a reality, buying a nearly above the Arctic Circle in the Norwegian Sea鈥檚 Gr酶t酶ya Strait and setting to work creating , a chic, modern, sustainable adventure oasis.

A haven for anglers聽since the 1600s, Manshausen Island had one salvageable building, a farmhouse from the 1800s that Ousland renovated into the main lodge. He then built seven austere glass-sided cubes cantilevered over the water. In June he finished two more 鈥渢owers鈥濃攖wo-story structures, each with聽a glass-roofed bedroom that provides jaw-dropping views to the sea, 392-foot Skotstindan mountain to the east, and聽the heavens, often lit with the aurora borealis.

A man on a boat holding up an enormous cod鈥攁t least three feet long
Norwegian Arctic cod is known around the world and prized for its taste and texture. This one, reeled in off Manshausen, is quite the catch. (Photo: Courtesy Ingeborg Ousland)

Ousland鈥檚 ultimate goal is to make Manshausen 100 percent carbon-neutral. It’s tough to charge solar panels in winter when there are only a few hours of daylight, but he plans to supplement the sun鈥檚 energy with聽a windmill that delivers power聽back to the grid. His small staff also maintains a garden, fishes for cod and halibut, raises sheep to cut the grass (there are聽currently 11 lambs on island), and barters with locals for what the property can’t produce.

Considering that Manshausen (a name derived from mannshaue, or 鈥渕an鈥檚 head,鈥 after a rock resembling a human head that was quarried there) was the dream of a world-renowned explorer, it鈥檚 no surprise that the place offers all manner of rugged day trips (for an extra fee), from expedition-style hiking to sea kayaking, led by experienced staff guides. But Ousland mostly built Manshausen as a place for visitors to聽enjoy the scenery. 鈥淢any people just need to fill up their batteries, relax, and connect with nature,鈥 he says.

国产吃瓜黑料 Intel

Two climbers navigate the precipice of the Nordskot Traverse, with an expansive vista of a gray sea and verdant valley below.
The Nordskot Traverse (Photo: Courtesy Adrien Giret)

You, too, can fish. The lodge provides gear and shares beta on where cod, pollack, and halibut are biting. I would opt for a short ride on one of Manshausen鈥檚 private power boats to the mainland to attempt the , a technical climb of 1,998-foot S酶rskottinden peak, followed by a 15-foot rappel to a nearly mile-long traverse of an exposed ridge that ranges in width from 15 to 45 feet. The views to the surrounding mountainous Arctic islands are uninterrupted. I鈥檇 also love to paddle a sea kayak with a guide to their secret coves for a swim. And this being Scandinavia, I鈥檇 spend quality time in the stoked and ready wood-fired sauna to steam away my aches at the end of each day.

Choice Accommodations

The interior of the second floor of the new towers, with a bed for two, two black chairs, and a glass ceiling. The view looks out at the sea and distant mountains.
The second-floor bedroom of one of the new towers (Photo: Courtesy B酶rge Ousland)

Book one of the two new and identical solar-powered twin towers, named after Norway鈥檚 two greatest polar explorers, Fridtjof Nansen and Roald Amundsen. Built on a pier, the towers聽appear to be floating on water. In each, the primary bedroom on the second floor is covered by a full glass roof, perfect for viewing the midnight sun during the summer and the stars and northern lights in the fall, winter, and spring. Downstairs is a twin聽bed, a full bath, and a sitting room with a floor-to-ceiling glass wall facing the sea. The cozy feeling of hygge here is one of the draws. Or opt for the single-story glass cabins, whose views are also incredible:

Eat and Drink

A circular wooden platter with crudit茅s of grilled beef heart atop crackers of yellow peas, with a glass of red wine to the left
Grilled beef heart with horseradish atop yellow-pea crackers (Photo: Courtesy Amanda Erming)

Hyperlocal cuisine is on full display at the , housed in the main lodge, where a simple yet sophisticated menu includes sea urchins, sandwort, pine shoots, wood sorrel, fish, moose, and elk, most of which is grown, foraged, caught, or harvested on or within close proximity of the island. I鈥檝e been told that the head chef, Ondrej Taldik,聽has more range with a beet than perhaps anyone on the planet, serving them fried, baked, rehydrated, crisped, pickled, and fermented.

When to Go

 

Ousland prefers spring, when the light returns, the weather is calm, and the fishing for halibut is fantastic. But I might prefer fall, with its cooler days and cold nights. The aurora borealis is best viewed September through March, but the resort is closed November to January.

How to Get There

There are direct flights to Oslo from New York, Miami, and Los Angeles. Once there, you鈥檒l hop a 90-minute flight north to the town of Bod酶, on Norwegian or SAS airlines. Head to the ferry terminal (a 15-minute walk or short taxi ride from the airport) and board ; the passage takes 1 hour 20 minutes and leaves daily at 6 P.M. year-round, and twice daily in the summer months. The lodge will pick you up by shuttle boat at Nordskot if they know when you鈥檙e arriving.

Don鈥檛 Miss

A view of the strong current of Saltstraumen, the most powerful tidal stream in the world, with a bench in the foreground and mountains in the background
Saltstraumen, outside Bod酶, is full of whirlpools created by a turning tide as it flows in and out of the fjords. (Photo: Getty Images/larigan鈥揚atricia Hamilton)

If you have time to spend in Bod酶 before heading toward Manshausen, visit, the most powerful tidal stream in the world. A 33-mile drive north of Nordskot will get you to , one of Europe鈥檚 largest coastal fortifications from World War II. It guarded the entrance to Vestfjorden, a 96-mile-long fjord to Narvik, an important route used to ship iron ore from Sweden to Germany. The , 75 miles north of the island in the municipality of Hamar酶y, is a museum dedicated to the life and work of the Nobel Prize鈥搘inning author.

Details

The two new solar-powered towers (with black siding) and a sea cabin (with white siding) look out on turquoise waters.
The two new solar-powered towers, with black siding, and a sea cabin, with white siding聽(Photo: Courtesy Adrien Giret)

To Book:

Price:聽Glass sea cabins are 5,600 Norwegian kroner ($523 as of press time) per night for two people, including breakfast. The new towers are 8,900 kroner ($830) per night for two people, including breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Address: Mannshausen 3
8283 Leinesfjord, Norway

The author, wearing sunglasses and a visor, with a view of Kitchen Mesa, New Mexico in the background
The author in northern New Mexico (Photo: Courtesy Granville Greene)

Stephanie Pearson鈥檚 maternal and paternal great-grandparents emigrated from Sweden, but she loves Norway almost as much, especially the cool air, cool people, healthy living, and long coffee breaks. She鈥檚 been there twice, most recently to dog-mush above the Arctic Circle from Troms酶 back to Jukkasj盲rvi, Sweden.聽

Lead Photo: Courtesy Adrien Giret

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