Early Saturday morning, the Korterødkilen inlet is flat and silver. You step out onto the terrace with a coffee, the Norwegian coastal air still cool from the night, and the only sound is birdsong and the distant creak of a small boat on its mooring. That's the texture of life at Korterødveien 89.
Sponvika sits at the very southern tip of Norway, tucked along the western shore of the Iddefjord where the coastline starts to feel almost secret — the kind of place people who grew up here talk about with a certain possessiveness, not quite ready to share it with the wider world. The cabin areas along Korterødveien have been established for generations, and plots here don't change hands often. Getting access to this particular stretch of the Norwegian coast, with its established community, direct sea access, and sun-drenched aspect, is genuinely uncommon.
The chalet itself is compact and considered. Sixty-five square metres in the main building, which means no wasted space and no rooms you'll never use. The living and dining area does the heavy lifting — big windows pulling in light and framing the view across Korterødkilen, enough floor space that six people around the dinner table won't feel like a squeeze. The kitchen was fully fitted in 2020 and it shows: clean lines, proper worktop space, storage that actually makes sense. Cooking here isn't a chore. On a summer evening, you'll have the terrace door propped open and the smell of grilled mackerel drifting back through the kitchen window while everyone's still outside.
That terrace. Thirty-nine square metres of south-facing decking, large enough for a proper outdoor dining set, sun loungers, and still room for the kids to sprawl. For a chalet of this size, it's a genero ... click here to read more