Restaurant in Oslo, Norway
Oslo's accessible New Nordic, no weeks-out wait.

Sentralen is one of Oslo's more accessible New Nordic bookings — no weeks-out planning required, and the kitchen has held Opinionated About Dining casual recognition three years running. Chef Even Ramsvik's seasonal approach rewards returning visitors who time visits around Norway's distinct growing seasons. A practical mid-tier choice before stepping up to Maaemo or Kontrast.
Sentralen is one of the easier bookings in Oslo's New Nordic scene, which makes it a useful entry point if you've already visited and want to return without the planning overhead of a tasting-menu commitment. Getting a table here does not require the weeks-out strategy you'd need for Maaemo or Kontrast — but the kitchen, led by chef Even Ramsvik, is taken seriously enough to have earned a place on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list three consecutive years (Recommended 2023, #371 in 2024, #401 in 2025). That's a track record worth paying attention to, even as the ranking has drifted slightly. If you've been once and liked it, there's a good case for coming back with a clearer seasonal agenda.
Sentralen occupies a converted bank building at Øvre Slottsgate 3 in central Oslo, and the architecture does most of the visual work before you've ordered anything. The bones of the room — high ceilings, layered original details , give it a weight that most purpose-built restaurant spaces in the city can't match. It operates across the week with weekday hours running 7:30 am to 8 pm and a shorter Saturday and Sunday window from 11 am to 5 pm, which means the weekend visit is effectively a lunch or late-afternoon affair rather than a dinner. Plan around that if your preference is an evening meal: weekdays are your window.
The seasonal dimension matters here more than at a fixed-format tasting-menu restaurant, because the kitchen's approach to New Nordic cooking is tied to what's available in Norway's short but intense growing seasons. Spring and early summer tend to bring the sharpest produce expression , wild herbs, early greens, and lighter preparations that reflect what the Scandinavian landscape actually offers in that window. Late autumn and winter shift the kitchen toward preserved, fermented, and root-heavy work, which is a different but equally valid proposition. If you visited during one season and found the menu less interesting than expected, the case for returning in another season is real, not just marketing. For regional context on how Norwegian kitchens use seasonal produce across the country, see what's happening at RE-NAA in Stavanger and Lysverket in Bergen , both work within the same Nordic seasonal logic at a higher price tier.
As a returning visitor, the most useful framing is to treat each visit as season-specific rather than repeating the same order pattern. The casual format means you're not locked into a chef's sequence, so you have more control over how far into the seasonal range you explore. That flexibility is one of the reasons the OAD casual ranking is meaningful here , it reflects consistency across seasons rather than a single strong performance.
Relative to Oslo's broader dining options, Sentralen sits in a comfortable mid-tier position where the cooking has genuine ambition but the format doesn't require the full commitment of a tasting menu. For comparison: Hot Shop operates in a similar price and casualness register with its own New Nordic perspective. Oslo's bar scene and Bar Amour are worth knowing if you want a lighter option before or after. For broader Nordic comparisons at the casual end, Kadeau in Copenhagen and Adam/Albin in Stockholm show how the same seasonal-casual format plays out in comparable Scandinavian cities.
Reservations: Easy to book relative to Oslo's tasting-menu restaurants , plan a few days ahead rather than weeks. Hours: Monday to Friday 7:30 am–8 pm; Saturday and Sunday 11 am–5 pm. Address: Øvre Slottsgate 3, 0157 Oslo. Chef: Even Ramsvik. Awards: Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe , Recommended (2023), #371 (2024), #401 (2025). Google rating: 4.1 from 821 reviews. Budget: Price range not confirmed in available data , check current menu on arrival or via the venue directly. Dress: No formal dress code data available; the casual OAD classification and converted-building setting suggest smart-casual is appropriate.
If Sentralen is your first stop into Oslo's food scene, use it as a calibration point rather than a ceiling. The city has a strong restaurant range from accessible casual through to serious fine dining. Our full Oslo restaurants guide covers the range, and if you're planning more broadly, the Oslo hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are worth a look. For New Nordic cooking elsewhere in Norway, Speilsalen in Trondheim, Under in Lindesnes, Glime in Hardanger Fjord, and MiraBelle by Ørjan Johannessen in Bekkjarvik each offer a distinct take on the same seasonal-Nordic approach at different price points and settings.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sentralen | New Nordic | Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #401 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #371 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Recommended (2023) | Easy | — | |
| Maaemo | New Nordic, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kontrast | New Nordic, Scandinavian | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Statholdergaarden | Modern European, Classic Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Hot Shop | New Nordic, Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Arakataka | Nordic , Norwegian | €€ | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Sentralen and alternatives.
The kitchen's New Nordic approach is inherently seasonal and produce-led, which tends to accommodate vegetarian and pescatarian preferences more naturally than meat-heavy formats. Specific allergy or dietary accommodation is not documented in available venue data, so check the venue's official channels before booking if you have strict requirements. Given the relaxed booking window — days rather than weeks — there's time to confirm in advance.
Sentralen is a converted bank building at Øvre Slottsgate 3, and it operates as a casual New Nordic venue under chef Even Ramsvik rather than a tasting-menu format. It has ranked on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list every year from 2023 to 2025, which signals consistent kitchen quality without the formality or price commitment of Oslo's fine-dining tier. Treat it as a calibration point for the city's food scene, not the ceiling of it.
Bar seating availability is not confirmed in the venue data, so it's worth checking directly when you book. What is clear is that Sentralen is a casual format — OAD lists it under Casual Europe — so the overall atmosphere supports a more informal visit than Oslo's tasting-menu restaurants. If counter or bar access matters to you, call ahead rather than assuming.
For a step up in ambition and price, Kontrast is the natural next move in Oslo's New Nordic tier. Maaemo is the city's benchmark fine-dining option, two to three price brackets above Sentralen and requiring advance planning. Arakataka and Hot Shop offer different formats at a comparable casual register. Statholdergaarden suits those who want classical cooking rather than New Nordic.
Weekday dinner runs until 8 pm, giving more flexibility than the weekend hours of 11 am to 5 pm. If you're visiting Monday through Friday, dinner is the more practical choice and avoids the weekend-only time constraint. Weekend lunch works if your schedule is fixed, but the earlier close means less time to pace a meal.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.