Reuters correspondents with local knowledge help visitors get the most out of a 48-hour visit.
FRIDAY
5 p.m. From Oslo Airport, take the Drammen express train to the National Theatre station.
Stay at the nearby Grand Hotel (+47 23 21 20 00) or Hotel Continental (+47 22 82 40 00) if you’re well heeled. Looking for somthing more economical? Try the Thon Hotel Cecil (+47 23 31 48 00), though it’s closed between Christmas and New Year’s.
6 p.m. Wander among food and gift booths surrounding the Spikersuppa ice-skating rink, bracketed by Parliament and the ornate National Theatre. Overlooking the scene is the Royal Palace, windows aglow.
8 p.m. Dine at Theatercafeen (+47 22 82 40 50), a Vienna-style café serving holiday fare like reindeer medallions and salted mutton. String musicians play from the balcony.
Alternatively: Dinner Bar & Restaurant, half a block away, for Szechuan and Cantonese food (+47 23 10 04 66).
11 p.m. Walk east past Parliament to a pedestrian-only stretch of clubs, pubs and casual eats, dodging blue-fingered accordion buskers in the lee of Oslo’s Lutheran cathedral. At the Oslo S station, about-face and repeat.
SATURDAY
9 a.m. Hop a tram or taxi (10 minutes from National Theatre) to Vigelandsparken to stroll among 192 bronze and granite human figures of every variety sculpted by Gustav Vigeland.
11 a.m. Walk northeast on Kirkeveien, then right on Bogstadveien (which becomes Hegdehaugsveien) for a stroll past expensive luxury boutiques and department stores. Shop!
When the street ends, bear right and enter the northeast corner of the Royal Palace Park as if you owned the place.
Admire the plumed officers of the King’s Guard, who make sure no one bothers the actual residents: King Harald and Queen Sonja.
1 p.m. Descend the stairway behind the National Theatre, stash your bags at the hotel and head up Universitetsgata to St. Olavs gate 2 for lunch at Cafe Tekehtopa, an old apothecary whose shelf of remedies now includes beer and wine.
2 p.m. At Universitetsgata 13 is the National Gallery, offering a version of Edvard Munch’s The Scream and works by other modernists and Norwegian landscape artists.
3 p.m. Make a beeline over Spikersuppa to Oslo’s chunky City Hall. Note the intricate brickwork, scan the wooden friezes and duck into where the Nobel Peace Prize is awarded before rounding the building to behold the Oslo Fjord, with ferries to everywhere.
At right is the Nobel Peace Prize Museum and a wharf area restored for shopping and dining. At your left is the Akershus Fortress, whose oldest stonework dates to the 13th century.
4 p.m. Follow the Aker Brygge boardwalk to Tjuvholmen, an artificial island filled with minimalistic Scandinavian architecture and home to the coolest art galleries in town.
On top of a decent collection of continental restaurants and cafés sits Renzo Piano’s first-ever design to be built in Scandinavia. The Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art features everything from Surrealism to post-modernist art.
6 p.m. Onward to the city’s stunning new waterside opera house clad in white Carrara marble — why not hail a cab?
If December’s Die Fledermaus opera or The Nutcracker don’t suit your tastes, consider a Christmas concert by opera soloists (tickets: +47 21 42 21 21).
8 p.m. About $85 gets you a December specialty — lutefisk, or lye-soaked cod topped with mustard and bacon fat. Come back for as many servings as you like … if you like it.
Gamle Raadhus (+47 22 42 01 07) and Engebret Cafe (+47 22 82 25 25) do it right and their seats are always filled.
SUNDAY
9 a.m. Early mariners knew the Oslo region as “Viken,” which may be how the Vikings got their name. The Viking Ship Museum, 15 minutes from the National Theatre on the No. 30 bus, brings alive this most dramatic chapter of history.
Noon. On returning to Karl Johans Gate, take a snack at Spikersuppa or light lunch at United Bakeries. Then pick up some wintry outerwear at the Helly Hansen (Karl Johans gate 3) or Norroena (Akersgata 30) flagship stores and head for Oslo’s North Woods in a Frognerseter Metro car from the National Theatre.
For bragging rights, visitors must venture to the heights. (For the snow report, call +47 22 92 32 00)
2 p.m. For alpine skiing or snowboarding, get off at Voksenkollen station and shuttle to Tryvann Tower (for the view) and Tryvann Vinterpark, a resort with snow-making machines, 11 lifts and 18 slopes up to 1,400 metres in length.
You can also rent cross-country skis to hit the 2,600 kilometres of groomed trails, some of them lit up in the evening.
Hop off the Metro one station farther up, at Frognerseteren, and you can rent a toboggan from the sleigh association (+47 22 49 01 21).
6 p.m. Dinner at Frognerseter, a log lodge from 1867. Its informal Cafe Seterstua offers sandwiches and meatballs. For venison, ptarmigan or salmon served under a chandelier, try the lodge’s Finstua (casual clothes are fine, but reservations are advisable: +47 22 92 40 40).