3-Bed Norwegian Chalet in Hamarvik with Sea Views, Heat Pump & 33m² Terrace



Lokknesveien 10, 7263 Hamarvik, Norway, Hamarvik (Norway)
3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 68m² Floor area
€140,800
Chalet
No parking
3 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
68m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Step outside on a June morning and the air hits you differently here. Cold, clean, carrying just a trace of salt from the Trondheim Fjord system stretching out beyond the treeline. The coffee's on the wood stove. Somewhere down the hill, a boat engine turns over. This is what owning a cabin on the island of Frøya actually feels like — and once you've had it, a weekend in a city hotel never quite satisfies the same way again.
Lokknesveien 10 sits on an elevated 640-square-metre plot in Hamarvik, a small coastal settlement on Frøya island in Trøndelag, mid-Norway. The chalet was built in 2006 and finished to a solid standard the following year — two floors, 68 square metres of interior living space, three bedrooms, and a pair of terraces totalling 33 square metres facing in two directions so you can follow the sun through the long summer days. At €140,800, it's one of the more accessible entry points into Norwegian coastal property ownership, and it comes without the compromises you'd expect at that price point.
The ground floor layout is open and social. Kitchen and living room share the same space, which sounds basic until you're actually in it — the wood-panelled walls and ceiling pull warmth out of the evening light in a way that painted plasterboard never does. The wood-burning stove anchors the living area, both practically and atmospherically. A heat pump handles the shoulder seasons and the serious cold snaps, so you're not dependent on firewood alone to keep the place comfortable through a Norwegian October. Large windows face the yard and the elevated terrain beyond, letting in the pale Nordic light that photographers fly here specifically to chase.
The kitchen has white cabinetry — classic, functional, easy to maintain — with enough counter space and storage to cook properly for a group. This matters more than it sounds. Frøya is crab country. The island produces some of the most commercially significant snow crab and brown crab in Norway, and the local fish market in Sistranda — the island's main town, roughly 20 minutes from Hamarvik — is the kind of place where you stop buying supermarket seafood for the rest of your life. You'll want a kitchen that can actually handle a full crab boil.
From the living area, you walk straight out onto the terrace. Two sides of the cabin have outdoor space, which means shade options in July and sun options in May. Thirty-three square metres is genuinely usable — room for a table, chairs, a gas grill, and still space to spread out.
Upstairs, a loft lounge adds flexibility. It works as a reading area, an overflow sleeping space for the third or fourth guest, or a quiet corner when the kids need somewhere to exist that isn't the main living room. The three bedrooms are properly sized, not the token-room afterthought you sometimes find in older Norwegian hytter. The single bathroom has natural wood panelling, a shower cabin, vanity unit with storage, and a window — simple, practical, in good condition.
Public water and sewage are connected. Electricity is in. This is not a primitive off-grid situation; it's a comfortable, functional vacation home that happens to sit in one of Norway's wilder coastal landscapes.
Frøya itself is worth understanding properly before you dismiss it as remote. The island is connected to the mainland via a series of fixed links — tunnels and bridges — through the Frøya and Hittra archipelago route. You drive on and off. No ferry timetables, no weather cancellations stranding you on the wrong side of the water. Kristiansund Airport is about 90 minutes away, and Trondheim Airport Værnes — Norway's third busiest, with international connections to London, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, and beyond — is roughly two hours by road. For a second home, that's workable. You can fly in on a Friday evening and be unlocking the cabin door before midnight.
The outdoor calendar here is genuinely four-season. Summer on Frøya runs from late May through August, and the light is extraordinary — the sun barely sets in June, casting that long golden hour that lasts four hours rather than forty minutes. Sea kayaking along the skerries, saltwater fishing from the rocks or a small boat, hiking the coastal paths that cut across the island's interior — these aren't organised tourist activities, they're just what people do here. Winter brings a different texture: the archipelago landscape under frost, the Northern Lights visible on clear nights from December through March, the particular Norwegian hygge of a wood stove going full blast while it's dark by three in the afternoon.
Sistranda has the practical infrastructure you need — grocery stores, a pharmacy, a health centre, a couple of restaurants. The Frøya Seafood Festival, held annually in late summer, draws visitors from across Trøndelag for exactly the reason you'd expect: the island's crab and fish harvest is that good. It's a local event, not a sanitised tourist production, and it's the kind of thing that makes you feel like you actually belong somewhere rather than passing through.
For international buyers considering Norwegian property, the legal framework is relatively straightforward. Norway's concession laws (konsesjonsloven) don't generally apply to recreational properties of this type and size, though it's always worth confirming with a local solicitor. Foreign nationals can own vacation property in Norway, and there's no requirement to establish a Norwegian company for personal use ownership. The property market in coastal Trøndelag has shown steady interest over the past decade, driven partly by domestic demand from Trondheim residents seeking weekend retreats — roughly a two-hour drive from Hamarvik. Rental income from Norwegian vacation cabins is taxed, but the rates are manageable, and short-term rental platforms have made it straightforward to offset ownership costs during weeks you're not using the place yourself.
Key features at a glance:
- 3 bedrooms across two floors, suitable for families or groups of up to 6
- 1 bathroom with shower, vanity, and natural wood panelling
- 68 m² interior living space on a 640 m² elevated plot
- 33 m² of terraces on two sides of the property
- Wood-burning stove plus modern heat pump for year-round heating
- Open-plan kitchen and living area with full-length wood wall and ceiling panelling
- Upstairs loft lounge with flexible use as extra sleeping or leisure space
- Connected to public water and sewage systems
- Electricity and running water fully installed
- Elevated position with views over surrounding landscape
- Large driveway with ample parking for multiple vehicles
- Built 2006, finished 2007, maintained in good condition
- Fixed road link to mainland — no ferry required
- Approximately 2 hours from Trondheim Airport Værnes
This is a cabin that's ready to use from day one. No renovation project, no off-grid complexity, no infrastructure to sort out before your first visit. Just drive in, open the windows, light the stove, and start the part of your week that the rest of your week exists to fund.
To arrange a viewing or request the full property documentation, get in touch with the team at Homestra. Properties at this price point with municipal connections and sea-access proximity in coastal Trøndelag move faster than most people expect — and this one won't sit around.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 3
- Size
- 68m²
- Price per m²
- €2,071
- Garden size
- 640m²
- 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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