3-Bed Norwegian Chalet in Numedal with 90m² Terrace, Ski Trail 89m Away



Bekjordsvegen 36, 3624 Lyngdal i Numedal, Lyngdal i Numedal (Norway)
3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 80m² Floor area
€98,000
Chalet
No parking
3 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
80m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Step outside on a February morning at Bekjordsvegen 36 and you'll hear almost nothing — just the soft compression of snow under your boots and, somewhere in the tree line, a woodpecker working at a birch. Strap on your skis, and within three minutes you're on a groomed cross-country trail threading through the Numedal valley. That's not a selling point dressed up in fancy language. That's just Tuesday here.
Lyngdal i Numedal sits in the long, quiet valley of the Numedalslågen river, roughly two hours from Oslo by car along the E134. It's the kind of place Norwegians have been keeping to themselves for generations — serious hiking territory in summer, a cross-country skier's paradise from November through March, and in between, a landscape that shifts from amber birch forests to frozen lakes with an unhurried confidence. The village has a petrol station, a local shop, and the kind of community noticeboard that still gets used. That's part of the appeal.
The chalet at Bekjordsvegen 36 is a solid three-bedroom cabin in good condition, sitting on a leasehold plot of approximately 1,000 square metres. At 80 square metres of internal living space, it's not enormous — but the layout is well thought out. A living room with large windows pulls in the treeline views and the generous daylight that arrives in midsummer from before 5am. The wood-burning stove anchors the room. On a cold January evening with the stove going and snow banking up against the glass, it earns its place in a way no underfloor heating system ever quite does.
The kitchen is functional with pine-fronted cabinets and a laminate worktop — honest, unpretentious, and perfectly usable. It won't win any design awards, and buyers who want a showroom kitchen will want to budget for an update. The dining area comfortably seats the whole family, and given that most meals here will follow hours outdoors, appetite won't be in short supply. Three bedrooms offer solid sleeping capacity for families or groups of friends, and a separate furnished annex — note it hasn't received formal planning approval — adds flexible overflow space that's particularly handy when the kids want their own territory.
The bathroom is tiled throughout and includes a bathtub, shower cabin, twin recessed sinks, and a toilet with a separate WC room. It's in working order, though like the kitchen, a renovation at some point would bring it in line with more contemporary expectations.
What genuinely sets this property apart is the terrace. At approximately 90 square metres, it's a serious outdoor room — large enough for a dining set, a pair of loungers, a gas grill, and still have room for the dog to stretch out. In June and July, when Numedal gets warm and unhurried Scandinavian sun, this is where the day ends. The garden around the cabin is flat, child-friendly, and practical without being manicured.
Getting here is straightforward. The road runs all the way to the cabin — no quad bike required, no seasonal access issues to navigate. There's ample parking for multiple cars, which matters when you're arriving with a full car boot of ski gear and groceries from the Kiwi in Kongsberg.
On the trails: the nearest cross-country skiing entry point is 89 metres from the front door. Within a 15-kilometre radius, the groomed network covers 45 kilometres of varied terrain — gentle valley runs, forested climbs, open plateau sections with long sightlines. In summer, many of the same routes convert to hiking and mountain biking trails. The Hardangervidda plateau is within driving distance for more ambitious day trips, and the Numedalslågen river itself offers good fishing through the warmer months.
Numedal has its own quiet cultural calendar too. The Numedal folk music tradition runs deep — the region is considered one of the heartlands of the Hardanger fiddle, and local events through summer draw musicians from across Norway. In winter, the valley's farming communities mark the season with their own rhythm: firewood stacked, cabins lit, the smell of freshly baked lefse drifting from kitchen windows.
For international buyers, Norway's property market is open to foreign nationals with no restrictions on purchasing leisure properties. The annual leasehold fee (festet tomt) is worth clarifying with the seller, as terms vary. Norway has a transparent legal framework for property transactions, and buyers typically engage a lawyer or estate agent to manage the conveyancing process. The property is connected to both mains water and electricity — not a given in this part of the country, and it adds meaningful comfort and year-round usability compared to many comparable cabins in the area.
At a price point of €98,000, this represents genuine value for a vacation home in Norway with immediate ski access, a large terrace, and multi-room capacity — particularly given Oslo's two-hour proximity and the infrastructure already in place.
Key features at a glance:
- 3 bedrooms plus furnished annex for additional sleeping capacity
- 1 bathroom with bathtub, shower cabin, and separate WC
- 80 m² of internal living space
- Approximately 90 m² terrace for outdoor dining and relaxing
- Wood-burning stove in the main living area
- Cross-country ski trail entry point 89 metres from the door
- 45 km of groomed ski trails within 15 km
- Mains water and electricity connected
- Full road access to the cabin with ample parking
- Leasehold plot of approximately 1,000 m²
- Furnished annex (not formally approved) for guests
- External storage shed for ski and outdoor equipment
- Child-friendly flat garden
- Quiet, scattered-development area with natural privacy
- Approximately 2 hours by car from Oslo
This is a property for people who know what they're looking for in a Norwegian cabin — not a renovation project, not a show home, but a ready-to-use base in one of the country's most authentic valley landscapes, with serious skiing on the doorstep and a terrace that will outlast any interior trend. If you're considering a vacation home in Norway or a second home in Scandinavia, Bekjordsvegen 36 deserves a proper look. Reach out through Homestra to arrange a viewing or to request the full property documentation — and go sooner rather than later. Cabins with this combination of access, capacity, and price don't linger.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 3
- Size
- 80m²
- Price per m²
- €1,225
- Garden size
- 1000m²
- 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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