On a quiet Sunday morning at Nakkerudgata 60, you crack the window above the kitchen sink and the only sound that comes through is birdsong and the faint lap of water from Tyrifjorden below. No traffic. No sirens. Just the kind of silence that city people spend years trying to find — and here it's a permanent fixture, built into the landscape like the pine trees that line the hillside.
This is Tyristrand. Not a place you stumble across, but one you return to, deliberately, every chance you get.
The cabin itself was originally built in 1926, and while it carries that quiet patina of age, don't mistake character for neglect. The wet room and bathroom were fully gutted and rebuilt in 2020 — new wastewater line, new plumbing, new electrical work, the whole lot. The kitchen followed, getting a modern fit-out with a dishwasher and a sensible, no-fuss layout that makes cooking a genuine pleasure rather than an exercise in frustration. The property is connected to municipal water and sewage, which matters enormously when you're thinking about year-round usability rather than just summer weekends. Fiber internet from NextGenTel is already installed too. So whether you're writing, working remotely, or just keeping up with the football scores, you're covered.
At 38 square metres of internal living space plus a 10 m² annexe area, this is a compact property — but it's one that has been cleverly arranged to feel generous. The entrance hall doubles as storage space and can accommodate a full-sized refrigerator. The main living and dining area has room for a proper dining table, a reading corner, and still leaves space to breathe. A cosy alcove off the main room works equally well as an extra sleeping nook or a window-seat retreat on ... click here to read more