The first thing you notice on a summer morning at Rødtanglia 31 is the light. It comes off Drammensfjorden in long, shimmering bands, cuts across the living room floor, and lands on the coffee table just as the coffee finishes brewing. You step out onto the 26-square-metre terrace with your mug, and the fjord stretches out in front of you — glassy, quiet, impossibly wide. This is what Holmsbu feels like before the rest of the world wakes up.
Rødtangen is one of those places that people who know Norway's coast quietly guard. It sits at the end of a peninsula on the western shore of Drammensfjorden, about an hour's drive south of Oslo along the E18 — close enough for a Friday evening escape, far enough that the city feels genuinely distant. The holiday area itself is barrier-controlled at the entrance, which keeps through-traffic out entirely. You hear birdsong here, the occasional creak of a rope on a dock, and in the evenings the low chug of a returning motorboat. That's about it.
This three-bedroom chalet sits on a freehold plot of 1,395 square metres on Rødtanglia, with the plot sloping gently toward open sky and fjord views that face southwest — the magic direction for Norwegian sun chasers. The terrace catches afternoon and evening light until late, which in July means golden hour stretches well past nine o'clock. Bring the neighbours over. Nobody's in a rush.
The chalet itself was built in 1969 and has been looked after with genuine care over the decades. At 59 square metres, it's an honest Norwegian hytte — designed not for show, but for living. Everything is on one level: entrance hall, kitchen, living room with a wood-burning fireplace, three bedrooms, a bathroom, and a separate toilet room. The layout is effi ... click here to read more