Step outside on a Tuesday morning in late June, and the light on the Helgeland coast does something you won't forget. It's low and golden even at 9am, bouncing off the water just a hundred meters from your front door, and the only sounds are a few gulls riding the wind above the shoreline and the distant chug of a fishing boat heading out past Herøy. This is Seløya. Small, quiet, and absolutely real.
Ormsøyveien 7 sits at the end of a cul-de-sac on this island in Nordland, about as far from the noise of city life as you can get without losing the conveniences that actually matter. The grocery store is a nine-minute walk. The ferry terminal is thirteen. And the sea — your own included seaside plot right down to the water's edge — is about a hundred steps from your door.
The house was built in 1963 and still carries that particular solidity you find in older Norwegian coastal homes: thick walls, a practical footprint, rooms designed for people who actually use them. In recent years it's had significant work done. New roof, new cladding, new windows, upgraded drainage, added insulation, and an electrical system updated post-2010. It carries a D energy rating, which for a traditionally built island home with a wood-burning stove and a heat pump doing the heavy lifting, is genuinely comfortable year-round.
Inside, the ground floor opens through a covered entrance into a vestibule with a sliding wardrobe — practical for the kind of life you live here, where outdoor gear rotates constantly with the seasons. The kitchen is spacious, with older cabinetry that's been freshly painted and fitted with new hardware. It flows naturally into the hallway and the living room, where a wood-burning stove sits ready for February evenings ... click here to read more