Unity Arena
Norway's largest indoor venue — 25,000 people under one fixed roof, from handball finals to headline concerts.
Coming soon on iOS — be first to walk Oslo offline.
Built in 2007 for 585 million NOK to replace the outdated Nadderud Stadion, Unity Arena hosted Eurovision Song Contest 2010 and the final of the 2025 World Men's Handball Championship. The same hall that seats 15,000 for sports expands to 25,000 for concerts, making it the biggest indoor gathering point in the Oslo region.
What to look for
- The asphalt floor — an unadorned base that serves football, handball, and full concert production equally
- 40 luxury boxes and 1,200 club seats visible along the upper tier
- The fixed roof spanning the full 25,000-capacity bowl without retractable sections
Located at Fornebu in Bærum, outside central Oslo; the venue operates on event days only, so check the calendar before making the trip.
Unity Arena is one of 27 sights worth the detour in Oslo, all bundled offline in Voyage GO — download the Oslo pack and it sits on your map with no signal, filling your travel passport the moment you walk past.
More to see in Oslo
- Oslo Opera HouseThe roof is a public plaza — walk straight up the white marble slope and look out over the Oslofjord.
- Munch Museum (MUNCH)Nearly 28,000 works by one artist — Munch left everything to Oslo, and Oslo built a whole museum around it.
- Akershus FortressSeven centuries of sieges, and it never fell once.
- Royal PalaceParliament cut its funding mid-build — twice — and it still became Norway's royal seat.
- Oslo CathedralTwo royal weddings, two centuries of state ceremony — Oslo's main church has been at Stortorvet since 1697 and hasn't stopped working since.
- Oslo City HallThe Nobel Peace Prize is awarded here every December — inside the same building where Oslo files its paperwork.