Club entertainment in Norway
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A
Calibar
Funky! Calibar is hip in all the right places with stunning lighting and décor that fuses chic modern style with retro flair (it claims to have the oldest floor in Bergen). Upstairs is café and conversation, but downstairs is a sweaty nightclub for a 30-something crowd drawn by ’80s music it can sing along to. You have to be 24 to get in and ready to pay Nkr96 for a cocktail.
reviewed
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B
Brenneriet/Bryggeriet
This pub, nightclub and disco appeals to a varied clientele from the just-legal to time-worn veterans. It’s not the classiest place in Norway, but it can be fun if your musical tastes aren’t too discerning.
reviewed
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Strut
This is a place of contrasts. Downstairs, with beers on draught and pool tables, is pubby while upstairs, where 1970s and ’80s disco music pounds, is decidedly retro.
reviewed
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C
Kafferiet/Telegrafen Night Club
This popular hang-out, right beside the HI hostel, attracts the 20-to-35 crowd. It shows sport on wide-screen TV and has occasional live bands (with cover charge).
reviewed
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D
Ramona
Within the Meyergården Hotell, this spot – and here comes another superlative – claims to be the largest nightclub in northern Norway.
reviewed
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Mucca
Mucca, located beside the Comfort Hotel Fosna, is where you’ll find the town’s younger crowd.
reviewed
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E
Jarl Hotell
The pub in the Jarl Hotell has a cellar disco that attracts the 18-to-25 crowd with house and techno.
reviewed
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F
G
With its cave-like entrance on Sjøgata, below the main square, this discoteka packs in the over-25s.
reviewed
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G
Ofelas Pub & Disco
Ofelas Pub & Disco pulls in a slightly older clientele. Open on Friday and Saturday nights.
reviewed






