Need to know
Rooms
127, including 19 suites.
Check–Out
12 noon, but flexible, subject to availability (charges may apply). Earliest check-in, 3pm.
More details
Rates include a buffet breakfast.
Also
There are 13 rooms specially adapted for guests with mobility issues, with grab bars and wide spaces, and there’s a lift. However, those in wheelchairs should note that due to the building’s age and layout it can be tricky to manoeuvre through public areas.
At the hotel
Lounge with newspaper, magazines, tea and coffee; gym; charged laundry service; free WiFi. In rooms: Smart TV, Nespresso machine, minibar.
Our favourite rooms
In designing the rooms, Swedish design firm Claesson Koivisto Rune pared back the building’s opulent Renaissance Revival features, opting for uncomplicated Scandi minimalism. Inspiration came from the suited-and-booted workers who once bought low and sold high here: soothing greys and blues, style with the precision of tailoring, and subtle details – grid-patterned carpets, pinstripe wallpaper, splashes of houndstooth – make them sexily professional. But, if you’re a sucker for history, check into the Junior Suite which was once the stock exchange manager’s office and has a wealth of original features.
Spa
There’s no spa at the hotel, but their pampering partner Anne’s Skin Care & Spa (a 10-minute walk away) will make you look radiant, whether you opt for a simple facial or even a botox refresh. But, there is a 24-hour fitness room onsite, with Crossfit gear, treadmills, cycles and rowing machines. Yoga sessions are held here too, and personal trainers are available on request.
Packing tips
Lovely as it is, Bergen is also unavoidably soggy – in fact it’s the wettest city in Europe – so pack accordingly. But don’t worry if you forget your windbreaker, because the flagship of Norwegian Rain is here, a shop founded by wet-weather-wear geniuses Alexander Helle and T-Michael when they tired of having their looks washed out.
Also
Architecture geeks, if you fall madly in love with the work the Claesson Koivisto Rune studio have done here, you can buy an art book about the conversion from Konst/ig Books.
Pet‐friendly
There’s a range of dog- and cat-friendly rooms, so your pet can stay for NOK300 a night if agreed with the hotel in advance. See more pet-friendly hotels in Bergen.
Children
This may have been a stock exchange, but it’s not really a place for shorts. Some rooms do sleep up to four, but there are no kid-friendly distractions onsite.
Sustainability efforts
A great deal of work has gone into the upkeep of the buildings’ historic features (100-year-old frescoes, coffered ceilings, wood panelling, and the spectacular Renaissance Revival frontage), and modernisation has been respectfully carried out by the Claesson Koivisto Rune studio, staying true to the building’s character. Water-saving showers are used and eco-friendly cleaning products, and the hotel has subscribed to the ‘Eco-Lighthouse’ environmental-management scheme. And, in the restaurants, food is sourced sustainably, seasonally and locally (after all, the fish market is right there), and aside from serving dishes delicious enough to ensure clean plates, the kitchens aim to reduce food waste as much as possible.