I thought I would begin by exploring the new parts of the City which are being constructed very elaborately after the closure of the working docks.
There is a huge and very elaborate new public library, the Deichman Library, opened in June 2020, not perhaps very prepossessing from outside, but spectacularly spacious inside, with escalators taking one upwards, more public working space than somewhere for books:-


Next, I walked up the roof of Snøhetta’s opera house, which seems to have been popular and successful, opened in 2008, a bit like a public ski slope:-



Then, the new Munch museum looms into view, bending its top, as if subservient to the Snøhetta building. I think I will reserve judgment on it until I have seen more of it. It’s had a pretty troubled history, the product of a competition in 2008, nearly axed in 2011, designed by Juan Herreros, a Spanish architect, in an appropriately industrial style, opening tomorrow:-


It gave me an irresistible urge to go and see the old Munch Museum, now closed, which opened in 1963 next door to the botanical gardens. I can’t say I mourn its closure. It doesn’t look to me to have had a great deal to recommend it – a low-rise, single story which opened in 1963. But at least I was able to explore the surrounding area of Tøyen and walk through the gardens:-


I see from Olly Wainwright’s tweets from Oslo that the library has sewing machines and 3D printing machines. Incorporating maker spaces into libraries seems like such a good idea. I know, from just how many repairs/alterations that I do to neighbours’ clothing that many people could save money – and the environment – by having access to a sewing machine.
I didn’t spot the sewing machines ! He’s ahead of me. Charles