"Barrier-free" Restaurants in Vestland
Nordic Sushi Cup champion Sergey Pak opened this ten-seat counter in 2024. The 14- and 20-course omakase menus pair Norwegian ingredients with Japanese technique—expect reindeer sashimi!
Chef Christopher Haatuft opened this modern Norwegian restaurant at KODE 4 in 2013. Ten-course menus feature scallops from a local supplier and vegetables grown on city rooftops through MatTak.
Elisabeth and Bjørn Buer have rebuilt their farm barn into a high-end restaurant with a spectacular view towards the Buerbreen glacier. Erlend Stueland runs the kitchen with locally sourced ingredients.
A rooftop garden supplies the kitchen with herbs and vegetables for the set four-course menu. In the dining room perched atop the Sundt building, large windows frame views of the city and the mountains.
The wine cellar beneath Park Hotel Vossevangen holds more than 70,000 bottles. Upstairs, the restaurant pairs that collection with an international menu centered around local ingredients.
Glass walls frame Lundarvatnet Lake and the forested mountains beyond at this award-winning design hotel. The gourmet menus around local produce vary by day of the week, offering three to seven courses.
Seasonal ingredients from local fishermen, divers, hunters, and farmers shape the Nordic à la carte menu at this informal restaurant and wine bar, opened in 2024. The wine list encourages exploration.
The team behind Pasta Sentral, which has fed Bergen for over 25 years, opened this more refined Italian sibling near the theater in 2016. Its name refers to a classic 1970s movie about friendship.
Named after an old word for “common people,” this bistro serves a daily-changing menu of Norwegian seafood and seasonal produce. The zero-waste kitchen offers an “Åpen Mat” tasting format for sharing.
The Sicily-inspired Olivia branch serves pizza and pasta made from scratch in a cozy interior. On the waterfront terrace, views span Bryggen’s wooden facades and the Fløibanen funicular.
Norway’s oldest family-run hotel has remained with the Nitter family since 1640. A four-course dinner features fjord langoustines, mountain venison, garden fruit, and farmhouse cheeses.
For over 15 years, this gastropub has served Nordic comfort food, including fish pie, meatballs, and stews. Norwegian beer is available on tap; penguin drawings add a playful touch to the otherwise straightforward interior.
Head chef Adam Bjerck keeps the approach simple, focusing on pure flavors and grilled dishes. In a Mibrasa charcoal oven, he gives cuts from Japan, Argentina, and Norway their signature crust and smoke.
This izakaya at Skostredet Hotel blends Norwegian seafood with Japanese ingredients in sushi, ramen and small plates. In summer, guests dine on the terrace in the lively bar district.
Since 1957, writers, actors, and journalists have gathered at this institution named after poet Johan Herman Wessel. The kitchen serves regional classics like cured cod and seasonal seafood.