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Risavika Port near Stavanger

Risavika Port is only a 20-30 minute drive from Stavanger city centre.


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We call at Risavika Port, which is only a 20-30 minute drive from Stavanger city centre. You can use a local bus to get to the center of Stavanger.. Once you arrive, you can revel in the vast array of fjords, mountains and postcard-perfect sandy beaches.

However, if you’re a real foodie, you’ll soon discover that the oil city has a great selection of restaurants and food outlets: Stavanger is famous as an international city of food. The city offers a wide range of restaurants from across the world. The city is also host to the celebrated Gladmatfestivalen (Happy Food festival) every year.

Practical information

Luggage boxes
No.

Toaletter
Yes, there are toilets on the 1st and 3rd floors. Disabled toilet on 1st and 3rd floors.

Parking
As a passenger, you get 72 hours of free parking by scanning the QR code located in the terminal at check-in. After scanning the QR code, you register the vehicle’s license plate number. You can then park for free in the large parking lot just outside the terminal.

Food and drink
On the 3rd floor, there is a coffee machine (also offering hot chocolate).

Lift
Yes.

ATM
No. ATM on board.

Payment/currency
The ticket office accepts NOK, DKK and EUR. Coins are only accepted in NOK.
Authorized Cards and Payment Options: Visa, Mastercard, Mobile Pay, Vipps, Maestro, Diners and American Express

Top attractions in Stavanger

You can spend a lifetime discovering the charms of Stavanger, but here are some of Fjord Line’s top tips.

Gamle Stavanger

Øvre Strandgate in Gamle Stavanger. Foto: CH - visitnorway.com
Øvre Strandgate in Gamle Stavanger. Foto: CH – visitnorway.com

Gamle Stavanger is Northern Europe’s best preserved neighbourhood of wooden buildings. The historic area consists of 173 protected and restored wooden houses which were built at the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th century. The houses vary in shape and size and are all painted white. There’s no better example of idyllic and peaceful western Norway! In 1975, Gamle Stavanger was identified by UNESCO as one of the best preserved towns in Norway. The Municipality of Stavanger has received several awards for the preservation of Gamle Stavanger. Today the houses are partly privately owned and partly municipality owned.

Norwegian oil museum

Norwegian oil museum in Stavanger. Foto: CH - visitnorway.com
Norwegian oil museum in Stavanger. Foto: CH – visitnorway.com

Norway’s oil capital wouldn’t be complete without its own oil museum. The 5,000 square metre museum shows the development of technology from the 1960s to the latest extraction techniques. Here you’ll learn everything about the oil industry, from the very first oil rigs to drill in the North Sea, to modern production ships and underwater systems. The story of how oil and gas were formed millions of years ago is also fascinating.

Norwegian canning museum

Long before the discovery of black gold, canning was a major industry in this Western Norway city. The canning museum opened in 1982 and exists as a final fading memory of a long-forgotten age. The museum itself is situated in an abandoned canning factory in Gamle Stavanger. Here you’ll discover old production equipment and get a sense of the historical period between 1880 and 1925. The old machines are still working, and on the first Sunday of the month, as well as every Tuesday and Thursday during the summer holidays, the ovens are fired up again.

Sverd i fjell

In historic and scenic Hafrsfjord, at the very heart of the municipality of Stavanger, you’ll find the impressive monument “Sverd i fjell” by the Norwegian sculptor Fritz Røed. The monument consists of three huge swords, nine metres tall, buried into the rocks. The swords commemorate the battle of Hafrsfjord in 872, when Harald Fairhair unified Norway into one kingdom. The memorial is regarded as a national symbol of liberty and the swords have been cast into the rocks so they may never again be used against one another.

Øvre Holmegata

This charming street is a local legend in Stavanger. It’s often colloquially known as Fargegata – the colourful street – and it can definitely be said to live up to its name! The street was originally regarded as an Achilles heel to the city’s development and for a long time all you’d find here would be dingy corners, noise and small shops that couldn’t afford to rent anywhere else. However, in 2005 the street experienced a full renaissance, when the old wooden houses were painted turquoise, pink and various shades of green. Today the street is the perfect place to stop for a cup of coffee in the sunshine!