External walkway access
Step straight out into open air from your front door. Less of an apartment feel — more like a townhouse.
Two timber-clad apartment buildings surrounding a shared courtyard, located between Verksgata and the historic seafront row now facing Verksalmenningen. Skroget — our play element built from a recycled fiberglass sailboat — sits at the heart of the courtyard, one of the few green oases in the neighborhood.
Completed in 2019 to TEK17 standards. Universally designed, well insulated, and built to last — without compromise on architecture or comfort.
Step straight out into open air from your front door. Less of an apartment feel — more like a townhouse.
Many apartments face Stavanger's inner harbor or historic Verksgata directly.
The airport shuttle stops right outside. Pedersgata, lined with restaurants and boutique shops, is the next street over.
Everything works — all the time. Solid management and stable, predictable costs.
Skutene is built in Stavanger's historic seafront row, in the front row by Fiskepiren. The location is optimal both for enjoying the city and for travel — the airport shuttle starts and ends its route right outside.
Pedersgata, the parallel street to Verksgata, is gentrified and lined with small restaurants and boutique shops.
The complex was completed in 2019 and built to TEK17 standards. The technical standard is high, and the complex meets all requirements for universal design.
The developer was Øgreid Eiendom, and the main contractor was SV Betong (later Herda Totalentreprenør, now Consto).
Our courtyard has a distinctly maritime character. At its heart stands Skroget — a recycled fiberglass sailboat turned into a play element. The boat is a Norwegian-built Alo 28, designed by Alf Ortang in 1974.
Note: detail page is in Norwegian.
The architects have honored the area's history. Skutene is designed in the style of classic Norwegian seafront houses, the kind that historically defined the area — where Verksgata and Pedersgata stood in the front row.
Today the neighborhood is a living part of the city center, with cafés, galleries, and small-scale industry alongside homes.
On Wednesday 28 May 2014, a major fire broke out in the protected wooden building heritage of Verksgata. Two buildings — Verksgata 31 and 33 — were completely destroyed. No one was injured, but it took the fire department several hours to bring the situation under control.
Stavanger police received assistance from Kripos (the Norwegian Criminal Investigation Service) in the investigation, but even after a series of interviews, they had no concrete theory about what caused the fire. The cause was never determined.
In the years that followed, the fire ruin stood — a burnt-out shell in the middle of the historic wooden quarter, a visible reminder of that dramatic day. When Skutene rose in the same street a few years later, the neighborhood gradually became defined by new buildings alongside the old.
Read Aftenbladet's follow-up coverage (Norwegian)
A few pictures from the buildings and the neighborhood.
Inquiries from residents, neighbors, and visitors are handled by the board. Contact information is shared on request.