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Play Airlines
Play Airlines

Press release -

Dear Icelanders! Fly with Play and come stay!

According to Avinor’s press release dated 12 October 2021, the Icelandic airline company Play is launching direct routes between Stavanger and Reykjavik. This means that already in spring 2022 we can invite Icelanders to Stavanger. The routes start in May 2022.

Stavanger by night. Photo: Brian Tallman Photography
Stavanger by night. Photo: Brian Tallman Photography

A potential hub between the US and Norway

In addition to Stavanger, Play will also launch direct routes with Trondheim. The company further plans to offer transfers for Norwegian travellers from Reykjavik to Northern America. The route between Stavanger International Airport Sola and Reykjavik will start up 26 May 2022 and will have departures every Thursday and Sunday.

Acting Director of Tourism in Visit Region Stavanger, Per Morten Haarr, welcomes the new routes:

- It is very positive that Play Airlines is investing in a new route to Stavanger International Airport Sola. This will give tourism in the Stavanger region access to foreign markets, and we will, together with the industry, look at market measures to take advantage of the opportunity that this route gives us.

More information on the routes: https://www.flyplay.com/en

Source: Avinor’s press release (Norwegian)


Why Stavanger?

Stavanger is known for street art, food, culture, and proximity to beautiful nature attractions such as Preikestolen, Lysefjorden, Kjerag, Dalsnuten, Flørli, Flor & Fjære and a myriad of islands outside Stavanger.


The food city of Stavanger

Can you believe it? Three Michelin stars in Stavanger! Restaurants and ingredients in this part of Norway receive the best reviews from both national food critics as well as from the Michelin Guide Nordics, where Stavanger became the first Norwegian city outside the capital to receive a Michelin star in 2016. It was the restaurant RE-NAA  that could boast this magic star, and the following year another star followed - awarded to the much talked about Sabi Omakase. Both restaurants each retained their stars in 2018 and 2019. RE-NAA then reached new heights with the second star in 2020 and retained them both in 2021. Sabi Omakase kept its star in both 2020 and 2021. Tango  also has Michelin awards (the plate/service level comfortable). Book well in advance if you want to challenge your taste buds at these restaurants. Fortunately, there is also a rich selection of first-class restaurants throughout the region.

Sabi Omakase
Sabi Omakase. Photo: Fredrik Ringe/Sabi Omakase



The art city of Stavanger

In Stavanger, you will find street art on almost every street corner, and the city has become one of the world-leading cities in street art. The former Nuart festival has put Stavanger and the region on the street art map. As a visitor, you get a magnificent, visual experience that you will soon forget, with great works (by Fintan Magee, Snik, Milu Correch, AFK, Skurk and Martin Whatson, among others) on outdoor walls, mainly in Stavanger and Sandnes.

For those of you who are interested in art, Stavanger also has its own art museum where you can experience the country's largest and most important collection of Lars Hertervig's works of art. Another important part of the permanent collection of the art museum is Frida Hansen's tapestries. Frida Hansen was one of Norway's foremost textile artists with a significant international career.

Top attractions in Stavanger

Old Stavanger - The old part of the city is one of the places you simply must visit when you are in Stavanger. The area that is also called Straen consists of 173 wooden houses that are idyllically located close to the harbour in Stavanger. Most of the houses are painted in white, they are small and charmingly crooked. A neighbourhood that takes pride in the fact that gardens and outdoor areas look the part. From spring to summer, it blooms in each flowerpot, and a stroll along the cobbled pedestrian street Øvre Strandgate is a great experience.

Herring fishermen and factory workers lived here with their families during the herring's heyday in Stavanger. In a former canning factory, you will find IDDIS Norwegian Graphic Museum & Norwegian Canning Museum, a museum where you experience exhibitions about Stavanger's important canning industry, and about the people who made it big.

Old Stavanger
Old Stavanger. Photo: FotoKnoff/ Sven Erik Knoff/ Visit Region Stavanger

Fargegaten is one of the streets in Stavanger you have most likely already seen pictures of on various social media. It's an Instagram favourite for many. The street was previously a somewhat forgotten part of the city that had its renaissance after initiators got the idea to paint the houses in vibrant colours.

The Norwegian Petroleum Museum is one of the most popular museums in Stavanger. The building itself makes it worth a visit. Hard to miss along the harbour promenade, as it is shaped like an oil platform. The museum itself tells the important story of how oil was found and how it is extracted.

Stavanger Cathedral is the only Norwegian cathedral  from the Middle Ages that has retained its original architecture, and the only one that has been in continuous use since the 14th century. According to tradition, the church was built in 1125, when Sigurd Jorsalfarer made Stavanger the diocese. The cathedral is currently being restored and will be closed from 1 May 2020-2022.

At Hafrsfjord, just outside Stavanger, you will find the monument Sword in rock. The story goes that it was in the nearby area that Harald Hårfagre gathered Norway into a kingdom in 872. The monument is in memory of the battle and consists of three swords set down in the ground, which stand for peace, unity, and freedom. The heroes of the Viking worlds are taken from swords found in different parts of the country. The monument was made by Fritz Røed (1928-2002) and was unveiled by King Olav in 1983.

Fjord cruise from Stavanger is possible all year round, whether you choose an electric catamaran from Rødne Fjord Cruise or a fast-paced RIB boat. You can also choose to experience the fjord and islands in VIP style in one of the luxury yachts of Private Cruise or Lysetur AS. Norledalso offers fjord cruises in the summer. In the summer you can also visit the incredible, tropical garden, Flor & Fjære, an unparalleled paradise, which you would not think is just outside Stavanger. A visit here could be mistaken for a visit to warmer regions, perhaps on some Mediterranean island? Exotic and colourful!

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Fjord Norge AS/Fjord Norway is the official tourist board of Western Norway. Our main functions are the international marketing of the Fjord Norway region, press-and study trips and to convey information from the Fjord Norway region to tour operators, press and consumers worldwide. Find more information on our website.

For more picture and video material click here.

Contacts

Gunhild Vevik, Region Stavanger Visitors & Convention Bureau

Gunhild Vevik, Region Stavanger Visitors & Convention Bureau

Press contact Director of communications 91617532

Official tourist board of Western Norway

Fjord Norway is the official tourist board of Western Norway. Our main functions are international marketing of the Fjord Norway region, press-and study trips, and to convey information from the Fjord Norway region to tour operators, press and consumers worldwide.

Fjord Norway's vision is to be the most professional and competent destination company in Europe. The company shall position the Fjord Norway region as the most attractive destination for nature based, adventure holidays.

A cooperation with Fjord Norway will make it easier for you to plan trips to and in Fjord Norway. We know the area and will be able to inform you about various offers, routes and major activities in the world’s premier Fjord region – including those off the beaten track.

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Nordre Nøstekaien 1
5011 Bergen
Norge
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