The first thing you notice, standing on the terrace at Stølane 11, is the silence. Not a dead silence — a live one. Wind moving through the birch trees, the faint knock of a hull against a wooden pier below, and somewhere across the water, a curlew. Then the smell hits: salt air, wild grass, and if the season's right, whatever's ripening in the old fruit orchard behind the house. This is Bergegrend, a rural stretch of the Fusa coastline in Vestland county that most international visitors never find. That's exactly the point.
The house itself was built in 1933 and 1934, and you can feel that in the best possible way. The basement is laid with thick stone walls — the kind that keep the interior cool in July and hold warmth from the wood stove long after the fire dies down in October. An extension was added in the early 1960s, giving the layout a slightly rambling, lived-in quality that no new build can replicate. Three floors in total, spreading across 113 square meters, with two living rooms on the main floor that catch afternoon light through large windows facing the fjord. The kitchen is traditional in character, which is a feature worth preserving — this is a house that lends itself to long, unhurried meals, not quick ones.
Upstairs, the loft was renovated when a former kitchen space was converted into a proper bathroom. Three bedrooms sit on this level: the largest in the center, two smaller ones flanking it. It's a layout that works naturally for families — kids or grandchildren in the outer rooms, adults in the middle, everyone with enough distance to sleep in properly. In summer, the late Norwegian light means you'll want good curtains. Worth knowing.
The garden is 1,710 square meters of freehold land, and it ea ... click here to read more