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Audio Guide Nobel Peace Center

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Duration: 16 min
Nobel Peace Center
Audio included

About this place

The Nobel Peace Centre showcases interactive exhibitions devoted to all Nobel Peace Prize laureates and the legacy of Alfred Nobel. Located beside Oslo's City Hall on Rådhusplassen, it offers visitors insight into the prize's history and the remarkable achievements of its recipients. The museum presents engaging displays that bring to life the stories of peace champions from around the world, making it an essential visit for anyone interested in global humanitarian efforts and Nobel's enduring impact.

Practical information

Brynjulf Bulls plass 1, 0250 Oslo, Norway
Opening hoursMonday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM Tuesday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM Wednesday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM Thursday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM Friday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM Saturday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM Sunday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
Official website

Points included in this audio guide

1
Nobel Field

Nobel Field

Nobel's Field stands at the heart of the Nobel Peace Center in Oslo. This evocative room allows visitors to engage with each Nobel Peace Prize laureate through an immersive experience, surrounded by thousands of lights that illuminate the hall. The installation conveys the magnitude and collective legacy of the award, creating a contemplative space where you can reflect on decades of peace advocacy and humanitarian achievement.

2
Medal Chamber

Medal Chamber

The Medal Chamber sits on the second floor of the Nobel Peace Center, housing an actual Nobel Peace Prize medal in a central glass display case. You can view it from every angle. The medal on show was awarded to Christian Lous Lange in 1921, the first Norwegian to receive the prize, and is identical to the ones presented at the official ceremony each 10 December.

3
Exposición Democracia en Peligro (2025)

Exposición Democracia en Peligro (2025)

Democracy on the Brink showcases the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize exhibition, examining the struggle for democracy in Venezuela and honouring laureate Maria Corina Machado. The display uses Venezuela's crisis as a lens to explore a broader global trend: democratic decline and the rise of authoritarianism worldwide. Open from 12 December 2025 to 6 September 2026, the exhibition invites visitors to reconsider democracy not merely as a political system, but as a mindset. What to see here challenges conventional thinking about governance and freedom.

4
Exhibition The Will to Change the World

Exhibition The Will to Change the World

"The Will to Change the World" is a permanent exhibition on the ground floor of Oslo's Nobel Peace Center, charting the history of Alfred Nobel and the Nobel Peace Prize from 1901 to the present day. Presented through engaging displays and interactive elements, it explores themes ranging from peace negotiations and nuclear disarmament to climate change mitigation and international cooperation. The exhibition illustrates how the prize has responded to major global challenges across more than a century, offering visitors insight into the evolving role of peace-building efforts worldwide.

High-quality audio guide of Nobel Peace Center
Available offline
Available in more than 10 languages
4 points of interest included
  • 1.Nobel Field
  • 2.Medal Chamber
  • 3.Exposición Democracia en Peligro (2025)
  • 4.Exhibition The Will to Change the World

Kids audio available

Kids version available with adapted and fun language for the little ones (10 min)

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