1-Bed Waterfront Chalet in Fjerdingby – 883m² Plot, Lake Øyeren Access, 30 Min from Oslo



Støtterudvegen 201, 2008 Fjerdingby, Fjerdingby (Norway)
1 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 95m² Floor area
€154,870
Chalet
No parking
1 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
95m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Step out onto the 30-square-meter terrace at Støtterudvegen 201 on a still Saturday morning, coffee in hand, and the only sound is water lapping against the shore of Lake Øyeren. Oslo's skyline feels like another world from here—and technically, it's only 30 kilometers away.
This is what draws people to Fjerdingby. Not a manufactured resort, not a managed holiday park. A real Norwegian cabin on a real freehold plot of roughly 883 square meters, with a private stretch of shoreline and a forested backdrop that turns golden every October. Finding something like this within half an hour of a Scandinavian capital is genuinely rare, and the market around Lake Øyeren knows it.
The chalet itself was built in 1953 and has aged with the kind of character that newer builds simply can't fake. Log walls. Exposed timber beams. A wood-burning stove that takes the edge off cool September evenings in about twenty minutes flat. A heat pump added in 2022 means you're not entirely dependent on firewood during shoulder-season stays, which is a practical upgrade that pays for itself quickly when you're arriving on a Friday evening in November and want warmth immediately, not in an hour. The cabin sits in good condition throughout—well maintained, thoughtfully updated, and ready to use from day one without any urgent renovation pressure.
Inside, the single bedroom uses a bunk arrangement to sleep more than the room count suggests, and a practical alcove near the main living space can absorb overflow guests or serve as a cozy reading corner for kids. The living room's large windows frame the lake view so directly that you sometimes forget there's glass there at all. It's a small space used cleverly, which is very much the Norwegian cabin tradition—you come here to be outside, and the interior is designed around that reality.
The kitchen handles everything from simple weekday suppers to longer family gatherings with ease. Adjacent dining space means meals don't feel rushed or cramped. The bathroom was updated with a contemporary incineration toilet in 2022, and a separate room with a washbasin covers the remaining essentials. Water runs via summer connection, standard practice for leisure properties throughout this part of Viken county. An annex building on the plot adds flexible space—guest overflow, hobby room, gear storage for kayaks and cross-country skis—and a separate outbuilding handles the bulkier storage that outdoor Norwegian life tends to accumulate.
Beyond the cabin walls, the property's position on Lake Øyeren is the real story. Øyeren is one of Norway's largest lakes, fed by the Glomma river, and the eastern shore around Fjerdingby is noticeably quieter than the more developed western banks. You can swim directly from the plot in summer. Fishing for perch and pike is viable year-round. Kayaking across to the delta nature reserve, Øyeren's protected wetland and a magnet for birdwatchers tracking migrating species each spring and autumn, takes about forty minutes by paddle. In July, the water is warm enough for extended swimming sessions. By late August, the evening light across the lake turns the kind of amber that makes you cancel your plans and just sit there.
Winter here is its own draw entirely. Østmarka—the vast forested recreational area that stretches east of Oslo—starts practically at the doorstep. Hundreds of kilometers of groomed cross-country ski trails run through the trees, and the Marikollen ski arena is seven minutes by car, hosting both recreational skiers and FIS-level competition events. When there's good snow, which in this part of southeastern Norway tends to mean January through March, the area fills with weekending Osloites who've discovered exactly what you'd be buying into. Outside those months, the Østmarka trails convert to mountain biking and hiking routes that wind through spruce forest and past small lakes for the better part of the year.
Practically speaking, Fjerdingby sits in a convenient pocket. Marikollen Torg, a local shopping center with a grocery store and pharmacy, is seven minutes by car—close enough for forgotten provisions, far enough that you don't feel like you're in the suburbs. Lillestrøm city center, with its train station offering direct services into Oslo S in around fifteen minutes, sits within easy driving distance. International buyers should know that Gardermoen airport, Norway's main international hub, is approximately 25 minutes north by car—which makes this property surprisingly accessible for European weekend trips.
The Norwegian property market around Oslo's commuter belt has remained resilient, and waterfront leisure plots with freehold ownership in this zone carry particular long-term value. This isn't a leasehold situation—you own the land outright, with full flexibility. Annual municipal fees are modest, and property tax at this price point in Rælingen municipality is minimal. For international buyers, Norway's process for foreign nationals purchasing property is relatively straightforward, though working with a Norwegian-registered conveyancing lawyer is standard practice. Rental income potential exists—waterfront cabins near Oslo are consistently in demand on short-term platforms during summer and winter seasons—though many buyers in this pocket choose to keep them private given how rarely such plots come available.
Key features at a glance:
- Waterfront chalet on freehold plot of approximately 883 m² with private shoreline on Lake Øyeren
- 95 m² total across main cabin, annex, and outbuilding
- 1 bedroom with bunk beds plus sleeping alcove for additional guests
- 1 bathroom with incineration toilet (2022) and separate washbasin room
- 30 m² terrace with direct lake views
- Wood-burning stove plus heat pump installed 2022
- Log wall and exposed timber beam construction dating to 1953
- Annex building suitable for guests, hobbies, or equipment storage
- 7 minutes by car to Marikollen ski arena and Marikollen Torg shopping
- Direct access to Østmarka trail network for skiing, hiking, and cycling
- 30 minutes by road to central Oslo; 25 minutes to Oslo Gardermoen Airport
- Summer water connection (standard for leisure properties in the area)
- Low annual municipal fees and minimal property tax
- Move-in ready condition with no urgent works required
A property like this—actual shoreline, actual forest, actual distance from the city that still means you can be back at your Oslo desk on Monday morning without a pre-dawn start—doesn't come up often. The people who already own cabins on this stretch of Øyeren tend to hold them for generations.
If you'd like to arrange a private viewing of Støtterudvegen 201 or want to discuss the practicalities of purchasing a vacation home in Norway as an international buyer, get in touch with the Homestra team today. We'll walk you through every step, from the first site visit to the final signing.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 1
- Size
- 95m²
- Price per m²
- €1,630
- Garden size
- 883m²
- Has Garden
- Yes
- Has Parking
- No
- Has Basement
- No
- Condition
- good
- Amount of Bathrooms
- 1
- Has swimming pool
- No
- Property type
- Chalet
- Energy label
Unknown
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