4-Bed Mountain Chalet Vacation Home in Noresund – 100m to Ski Trails, Norefjell



Nedre Huldrakollveien 43, 3536 Noresund, Noresund (Norway)
4 Bedrooms · 2 Bathrooms · 104m² Floor area
€420,000
Chalet
No parking
4 Bedrooms
2 Bathrooms
104m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Step outside on a January morning and the only sound is the creak of snow settling in the pines. The groomed cross-country trail that runs just 100 meters from the front door hasn't been touched yet. You're the first one out. That's the kind of quiet that people drive hours from Oslo to find — and from Nedre Huldrakollveien 43, you wake up inside it every day.
This four-bedroom chalet sits in the Bøseter area of Noresund, a short drive from the Norefjell alpine resort and about two hours from Oslo's Gardermoen airport. It's the kind of location that makes the calendar irrelevant. Winter pulls you onto the slopes and trails. Summer sends you up into the high terrain above the treeline on a mountain bike, or down to the shores of Krøderen lake for a swim in water cold enough to make you feel genuinely alive. The property isn't just a base between activities — it's a place you actually want to come back to.
Built in 2013 and spread across 104 square meters on a freehold plot of 1,242 square meters, the chalet has been kept in good condition, with the interior wooden paneling on walls and ceilings recently restained to keep that warm Nordic mountain feel without the mustiness that older cabins can carry. Step through the entrance hall — underfloor heating underfoot from the moment you strip off your boots — and the ground floor opens into a bright living room with east-facing windows that catch the morning light and frame a sweep of forested ridge in every season. The fireplace is not decorative. After a full day on the Norefjell pistes, which top out at around 1,124 meters, you'll use it.
The kitchen and dining area runs off the living space in an open configuration, with enough counter room and storage to handle a proper Saturday dinner for eight. No galley-sized Norwegian cabin compromise here. The layout works for a family cooking together or for guests spilling across the room with wine glasses while someone handles the elk stew. Out through the living room, the northeast-facing terrace wraps around approximately 33 square meters, curving from the east side of the cabin around to a south-facing stretch outside the kitchen. On a clear March afternoon, when the sun is already strong and the snow is still deep, this terrace is where you'll spend an hour longer than you planned.
Upstairs, a loft lounge gives the family a second space to spread out — genuinely useful if you've got teenagers who don't want to watch the same film as the adults, or if the kids need somewhere to run their board games without commandeering the main sofa. The loft opens directly onto a private eight-square-meter balcony, and the mountain views from up here, over the tops of the spruce trees, are the kind of thing that makes you stop mid-coffee and just look. The four bedrooms are distributed to give real privacy — the main bedroom is generously proportioned, and the three further rooms are comfortable for children, guests, or the regular friends who will very quickly start asking when they can come back. Two full bathrooms, one on each floor, both with showers and toilets, means no morning queue drama.
An external power supply for a jacuzzi has already been installed. Bring your own or source one locally — the infrastructure is ready. After a February ski day when the temperature drops hard at dusk, the logic of soaking in warm water under a sky full of stars needs no explanation. A three-square-meter external storage room keeps the skis, poles, boots, and bikes organized and out of the house, and a large 38-square-meter loft space (hems) above adds serious flexibility for storage or a future sleeping area if you want to push the sleeping capacity further.
Norefjell's ski area offers 23 downhill runs across multiple difficulty levels, a terrain park, and ski school facilities — which matters if you're introducing younger kids to the sport or improving your own technique. The cross-country network around Bøseter is extensive and well-maintained, connecting through forested terrain toward Eggedal and further into Numedal. Come June, those same trails become mountain bike routes and hiking paths, with marked trails heading up toward the summit plateau. The views from up there, across the Hallingdal and down toward the Tyrifjorden basin, are genuinely disorienting in scale. Krøderen lake, a 15-minute drive away, offers kayaking, fishing, and summer swimming with water temperatures that peak in late July.
For dining and provisions, Noresund has local options, and Krøderen and Sigdal are close enough for a short run. The Norefjell spa hotel nearby provides a restaurant, wellness facilities, and a heated pool — a strong option for a low-effort evening when nobody feels like cooking. Geilo is reachable for day trips, and the entire Hallingdal corridor offers consistent winter markets, local food producers, and traditional Norwegian cultural events throughout the year including the Numedal summer folk music festival.
For international buyers considering a second home in Norway, the legal framework for foreign property ownership is straightforward, and Norway's EEA status simplifies many financial and banking arrangements. The Norwegian vacation rental market around Norefjell is active in both winter and summer, with strong demand from Oslo families who can't always escape to their own hytte. This chalet's layout, condition, and location make it genuinely competitive in the short-term rental market, and professional management services operating in the area can handle bookings and property maintenance between your own stays.
Ownership here is freehold — you own the land outright. The plot size means there's real privacy from neighbors, a garden area for kids to run loose in, and space for a proper Norwegian summer evening with a fire pit going until midnight.
Key features at a glance:
- 4 bedrooms and 2 full bathrooms across two floors, 104 sqm interior
- Freehold plot of 1,242 sqm in the sought-after Bøseter area, Noresund
- 100 meters from groomed cross-country ski trails
- Short drive to Norefjell alpine resort with 23 downhill runs
- Built 2013, good condition, recently restained wood paneling throughout
- Underfloor heating in entrance hall, wood-burning fireplace in living room
- 33 sqm wraparound terrace plus 8 sqm private balcony from loft lounge
- External jacuzzi power supply already installed
- 38 sqm loft storage/flex space and 3 sqm external gear storage room
- Second living area (loft lounge) ideal for families with children
- East and south-facing aspects for excellent natural light and sun
- Strong year-round rental demand from Oslo market, approx. 2hrs from Gardermoen
- Near Norefjell spa hotel for dining, wellness, and leisure
- Freehold ownership, accessible for international and EEA buyers
- All-season destination: skiing, hiking, mountain biking, lake swimming
If you've been thinking about a second home in Scandinavia, this is a rare chance to secure a well-maintained, move-in-ready chalet in one of southern Norway's most active mountain areas at a realistic price point. Properties in this condition and location don't stay available long. Reach out through Homestra today to arrange a private viewing or request the full documentation pack — and come see what a Norwegian mountain morning actually feels like from inside this cabin.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 4
- Size
- 104m²
- Price per m²
- €4,038
- Garden size
- 1242m²
- Has Garden
- Yes
- Has Parking
- No
- Has Basement
- No
- Condition
- good
- Amount of Bathrooms
- 2
- Has swimming pool
- No
- Property type
- Chalet
- Energy label
Unknown
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