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Expedition to Iceland - Hamburg to Reykjavík via North Atlantic Islands
MS Fridtjof Nansen, HX Hurtigruten Expeditions
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KNOWLEDGE & SERVICE
Our extensively travelled team are here to ensure you receive the very best advice and first-class service.
MS Fridtjof Nansen
Departure: 07/05/2026
Duration: 13 Days
Hamburg to Reykjavík
Itinerary
Iceland cruise | Expedition to Iceland - Hamburg to Reykjavík via North Atlantic Islands
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Day 1 Hamburg, Germany 07 May 2026 (Thursday)
Hamburg is Germany’s second-largest city with a history dating back to Charlemagne. A major port, this vibrant city is home to art and culture, extensive shopping facilities, Baroque buildings and waterfront vistas. With its well-known fish market, art galleries and Museums together with several beautiful parks including a botanical garden, this is a city with something for everyone. British visitors who remember the Swinging Sixties may like to visit the streets around Grosse Freiheit, where an unknown pop group called The Beatles gave their first public performances in various local clubs be... See more
- Day 3 Lysefjord, Norway 09 May 2026 (Saturday)
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Day 4 Lerwick, Shetland Islands, Scotland 10 May 2026 (Sunday)
Founded by Dutch fishermen in the 17th century, Lerwick today is a busy town and administrative center. Handsome stone buildings—known as lodberries—line the harbor; they provided loading bays for goods, some of them illegal. The town's twisting flagstone lanes and harbor once heaved with activity, and Lerwick is still an active port today. This is also where most visitors to Shetland dock, spilling out of cruise ships, allowing passengers to walk around the town.Founded by Dutch fishermen in the 17th century, Lerwick today is a busy town and administrative center. Handsome stone buildings—known as lodberries—line the harbor; they provided loading bays for goods, some of them illegal. The town's twisting flagstone lanes and harbor once heaved with activity, and Lerwick is still an active port today. This is also where most visitors to Shetland dock, spilling out of cruise ships, allowing passengers to walk around the town.
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Day 5 Thorshavn, Faroe Islands 11 May 2026 (Monday)
More than 600 miles (nearly 1,000 kilometres) from Denmark’s west coast lie the Faroes, a triangle of eighteen windswept islands, seventeen of which are inhabited. Only 48,500 people plus some 70,000 sheep roam these remote lands. Much of the islands’ heritage reflects a medieval past, beginning with the arrival of farmers from western Norway who settled here in the 9th century. Evidence of this Scandinavian heritage is preserved through centuries of isolation; ancient structures can still be seen in villages clustered around old churches. Sheer cliffs and waterfalls carve Streymoy, the larges... See moreMore than 600 miles (nearly 1,000 kilometres) from Denmark’s west coast lie the Faroes, a triangle of eighteen windswept islands, seventeen of which are inhabited. Only 48,500 people plus some 70,000 sheep roam these remote lands. Much of the islands’ heritage reflects a medieval past, beginning with the arrival of farmers from western Norway who settled here in the 9th century. Evidence of this Scandinavian heritage is preserved through centuries of isolation; ancient structures can still be seen in villages clustered around old churches. Sheer cliffs and waterfalls carve Streymoy, the largest of the islands, where Torshavn is one of the world’s smallest capitals with about 12,400 inhabitants, plus another 5,000 living in the suburbs of Argir and Hoyvik. Visitors find interesting museums, churches, monuments and all the amenities of a modern town and thriving harbour here. The world’s oldest, still active parliament was founded in the Viking age. Today, it houses the main offices of the local government. Many of the attractions are found outside of Torshavn in the rugged beauty of Streymoy. There are fields with grazing ponies and sheep, tiny hamlets where residents live in half-timbered houses topped by green grass roofs, and dramatic rock formations. Birds by the thousands populate the craggy seaside cliffs, which make an ideal stopover for migratory gannets, guillemots and puffins. The Faroes' climate is generally wet and windy. Because of the Gulf Stream, the temperature is a good deal more moderate than the latitude might imply; it also helps to keep Faroe harbours ice-free year-round.
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Day 6 Seydisfjørdur, Iceland 12 May 2026 (Tuesday)
Seyðisfjörður, a beautiful 19th-century Norwegian village on the east coast of Iceland, is regarded by many as one of Iceland's most picturesque towns, not only due to its impressive environment, but also because nowhere in Iceland has a community of old wooden buildings been preserved so well as here. Poet Matthías Johannessen called Seyðisfjörður a 'pearl enclosed in a shell'. The community owes its origins to foreign merchants, mainly Danes, who started trading in the fjord in the mid-19th century. But the crucial factor in the evolution of the village was the establishment of the Icelandic... See moreSeyðisfjörður, a beautiful 19th-century Norwegian village on the east coast of Iceland, is regarded by many as one of Iceland's most picturesque towns, not only due to its impressive environment, but also because nowhere in Iceland has a community of old wooden buildings been preserved so well as here. Poet Matthías Johannessen called Seyðisfjörður a 'pearl enclosed in a shell'. The community owes its origins to foreign merchants, mainly Danes, who started trading in the fjord in the mid-19th century. But the crucial factor in the evolution of the village was the establishment of the Icelandic herring fishery by Norwegians in 1870-1900. The Norwegians built up a number of herring-fishing facilities, and in a matter of years the little community grew into a boom town. Today, about 800 people live in Seyðisfjörður. The local economy has long been based on the fisheries, while light industry also flourishes. Tourism is playing a growing role, as the picturesque town in its spectacular surroundings attracts more and more visitors. The car/passenger ferry Norrøna, which plies between continental Europe and Iceland every summer, docks at Seyðisfjörður every Thursday. Seyðisfjörður has been a cosmopolitan community from its foundation, and the ferry service has contributed to ensuring that it remains so.
See less - Day 7 Grímsey Island, Iceland 13 May 2026 (Wednesday)
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Day 8 Akureyri, Iceland 14 May 2026 (Thursday)
Akureyri, called the Capital of the North is the second largest urban area in Iceland, and a lively one at that. Hemmed by the 60-km (37-mile) long Eyjafjörður, Akureyri is sheltered from the ocean winds and embraced by mountains on three sides. Late 19th-century wooden houses impart a sense of history, and the twin spires of a modern Lutheran church rising on a green hill near the waterfront, provide a focal point. To the south of Akureyri is the pyramid-shape rhyolite mountain Súlur. Beyond it is Kerling, the highest peak in Eyjafjörður District.Akureyri, called the Capital of the North is the second largest urban area in Iceland, and a lively one at that. Hemmed by the 60-km (37-mile) long Eyjafjörður, Akureyri is sheltered from the ocean winds and embraced by mountains on three sides. Late 19th-century wooden houses impart a sense of history, and the twin spires of a modern Lutheran church rising on a green hill near the waterfront, provide a focal point. To the south of Akureyri is the pyramid-shape rhyolite mountain Súlur. Beyond it is Kerling, the highest peak in Eyjafjörður District.
See less - Day 10 Patreksfjørdur, Iceland 16 May 2026 (Saturday)
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Day 11 Stykkishólmur, Iceland 17 May 2026 (Sunday)
Stykkishólmur, located in western Iceland at the northern end of the Snæfellsnes peninsula, is the commerce center for the area. Its natural harbor allowed this town to become an important trading center early in Iceland’s history. The first trading post was established in the 1550s, and still today fishing is the major industry. The town center boasts beautiful and well-preserved old houses from earlier times. Stykkisholmur is very environmentally conscious – it was the first community in Europe to get the EarthCheck environmental certification, was the first municipality in Iceland to start... See more
Stykkishólmur, located in western Iceland at the northern end of the Snæfellsnes peninsula, is the commerce center for the area. Its natural harbor allowed this town to become an important trading center early in Iceland’s history. The first trading post was established in the 1550s, and still today fishing is the major industry. The town center boasts beautiful and well-preserved old houses from earlier times. Stykkisholmur is very environmentally conscious – it was the first community in Europe to get the EarthCheck environmental certification, was the first municipality in Iceland to start fully sorting its waste, and was the first town in Iceland to receive the prestigious Blue flag eco-label for its harbor. It has also been a European Destination of Excellence (EDEN), since 2011.
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Day 12 Heimaey Island, Iceland 18 May 2026 (Monday)
It’s hard to imagine, as you stroll Heimaey’s idyllic streets of white wooden houses, that this island was literally torn apart by a spectacular volcanic eruption, just over 40 years ago. The fact that you can visit incredible Heimaey at all is something of a miracle – because the oozing lava of the Eldfell volcano threatened to seal the harbour off completely. Fortunately, its advance was halted by gallons of seawater, pumped onto it by the plucky islanders, who saved their fishing industry in the process. Iceland's famous for its scenery, and the huge castles of volcanic rock that rise out o... See moreIt’s hard to imagine, as you stroll Heimaey’s idyllic streets of white wooden houses, that this island was literally torn apart by a spectacular volcanic eruption, just over 40 years ago. The fact that you can visit incredible Heimaey at all is something of a miracle – because the oozing lava of the Eldfell volcano threatened to seal the harbour off completely. Fortunately, its advance was halted by gallons of seawater, pumped onto it by the plucky islanders, who saved their fishing industry in the process. Iceland's famous for its scenery, and the huge castles of volcanic rock that rise out of the sea's waves here are some of the country's most dramatic.
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Day 13 Reykjavík, Iceland 19 May 2026 (Tuesday)
Sprawling Reykjavík, the nation's nerve center and government seat, is home to half the island's population. On a bay overlooked by proud Mt. Esja (pronounced eh-shyuh), with its ever-changing hues, Reykjavík presents a colorful sight, its concrete houses painted in light colors and topped by vibrant red, blue, and green roofs. In contrast to the almost treeless countryside, Reykjavík has many tall, native birches, rowans, and willows, as well as imported aspen, pines, and spruces.Reykjavík's name comes from the Icelandic words for smoke, reykur, and bay, vík. In AD 874, Norseman Ingólfur Arna... See moreSprawling Reykjavík, the nation's nerve center and government seat, is home to half the island's population. On a bay overlooked by proud Mt. Esja (pronounced eh-shyuh), with its ever-changing hues, Reykjavík presents a colorful sight, its concrete houses painted in light colors and topped by vibrant red, blue, and green roofs. In contrast to the almost treeless countryside, Reykjavík has many tall, native birches, rowans, and willows, as well as imported aspen, pines, and spruces.Reykjavík's name comes from the Icelandic words for smoke, reykur, and bay, vík. In AD 874, Norseman Ingólfur Arnarson saw Iceland rising out of the misty sea and came ashore at a bay eerily shrouded with plumes of steam from nearby hot springs. Today most of the houses in Reykjavík are heated by near-boiling water from the hot springs. Natural heating avoids air pollution; there's no smoke around. You may notice, however, that the hot water brings a slight sulfur smell to the bathroom.Prices are easily on a par with other major European cities. A practical option is to purchase a Reykjavík City Card at the Tourist Information Center or at the Reykjavík Youth Hostel. This card permits unlimited bus usage and admission to any of the city's seven pools, the Family Park and Zoo, and city museums. The cards are valid for one (ISK 3,300), two (ISK 4,400), or three days (ISK 4,900), and they pay for themselves after three or four uses a day. Even lacking the City Card, paying admission (ISK 500, or ISK 250 for seniors and people with disabilities) to one of the city art museums (Hafnarhús, Kjarvalsstaðir, or Ásmundarsafn) gets you free same-day admission to the other two.
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What's Included:
- Daily Expeditions and activities
- Daily breakfast, lunch and dinner
- All-inclusive drinks on voyages departing for Antartica from October 2025
- Tea, coffee and soft drinks daily
- Complimentary Wi-fi
- Gratuities included
- Full access to science centre
- Full use of sauna, hot tubs and more
- Professional photos from the onboard photographer
- Expedition jacket and water bottle
Suites
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The 1896 Cabin
130 years ago, at the dawn of expedition cruising, we set out from Hammerfest to Svalbard on a pioneering voyage – one that sparked the spirit of exploration that still carries us forward today.
To mark this anniversary, we invite guests travelling aboard MS Fridtjof Nansen to step back in time and live as the pioneers did, for one night only.
The 1896 Cabin
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Polar Outside | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Larger cabins on middle decks. Most 20 square meters, flexible sleeping arrangements, some with sofabed, TV.
- Lower-deck cabin
- Window
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Some with sofa bed
- Bathrobes and slippers available on request
- Guests: up to 4 | Size: 19-23 m2
- Cabin Code: RR
Polar Outside | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Polar Outside | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Polar Outside | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Polar Outside | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Polar Outside | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
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Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Middle deck
Large accessible cabins without balcony. Middle decks, flexible sleeping arrangements, TV, kettle, tea and coffee.
Large lower-deck cabin
- Wheelchair-accessible cabin, may be available for general booking
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Window
- Bathrobes and slippers available for request
- Guests: 2 | Size: 24-26 m2
- Cabin Code: TY
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Middle deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Middle deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Middle deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Middle deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Middle deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Middle deck
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Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - With balcony
High deck cabins with balcony. Spacious cabins, different sizes, flexible sleeping arrangements with double bed that can be divided into two single beds, some with sofabed, TV, kettle, tea and coffee. With limited view.
- Upper-deck cabin
- Private balcony (limited view)
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Some with sofa bed
- Bathrobes and slippers available for request
- Guests: up to 4 | Size: 18 m2
- Cabin Code: XTJ
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - With balcony
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - With balcony
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - With balcony
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Arctic Superior | Wheelchair-accessible outside cabin with balcony
Accessible cabin with balcony. High deck, broad balcony, double bed, TV, kettle, tea and coffee.
- Upper-deck cabin
- Private balcony
- Wheelchair-accessible cabin, may be available for general booking
- Double bed
- Bathrobes and slippers are available on request.
- Guests: 2 | Size: 19 m2
- Cabin Code: XY
Arctic Superior | Wheelchair-accessible outside cabin with balcony
Arctic Superior | Wheelchair-accessible outside cabin with balcony
Arctic Superior | Wheelchair-accessible outside cabin with balcony
Arctic Superior | Wheelchair-accessible outside cabin with balcony
Arctic Superior | Wheelchair-accessible outside cabin with balcony
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Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
High deck cabins with balcony. Spacious cabins, different sizes, double bed, some with sofabed, TV, kettle, tea and coffee.
- Upper-deck cabin
- Private balcony
- Double bed
- Bathrobes and slippers are available on request.
- Guests: 2 | Size: 15-19 m2
- Cabin Code: XTD
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
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Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Large cabins without balcony. Lower/middle decks, flexible sleeping arrangements, sofabed, TV, kettle, tea and coffee.
- Large lower-deck cabin
- Window
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Bathrobes and slippers available on request
- Guests: 2 | Size: 27 m2
- Cabin Code: TT
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
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Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
High deck cabins with balcony. Spacious cabins, different sizes, flexible sleeping arrangements, some with sofabed, TV, kettle, tea and coffee.
- Upper-deck cabin
- Private balcony
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Sofa bed or seating area
- Bathrobes and slippers available for request
- Guests: up to 4 | Size: 18 m2
- Cabin Code: XT
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
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Expedition Suite | Corner suite
Corner cabin with large windows. Flexible sleeping arrangements, TV, minibar, bathrobe, kettle, tea and coffee, espresso maker. Without balcony.
- Upper-deck corner suite
- Large windows
- Seating area
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Bathrobes and slippers on request
- Guests: 2 | Size: 22 m2
- Cabin Code: MF
Expedition Suite | Corner suite
Expedition Suite | Corner suite
Expedition Suite | Corner suite
Expedition Suite | Corner suite
Expedition Suite | Corner suite
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Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Suites with private balcony, different sizes, top-high decks, flexible sleeping arrangements, some with sofabed, TV, minibar, bathrobe, kettle, tea and coffee, espresso maker.
- Upper-deck suite
- Private balcony
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Sofa bed or seating area
- Bathrobes and slippers on request
- Guests: up to 4 | Size: 22-28 m2
- Cabin Code: ME
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
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Expedition Suite | Large suite - With balcony
Large Corner Suite with private balcony, flexible sleeping arrangements, sofabed, TV, minibar, bathrobe, kettle, espresso maker. Adapted for guests with wheelchair.
Large upper-deck corner suite
- Large windows
- Private balcony
- Wheelchair accessible, may be available for general booking
- Seating area
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Double fold-down bed
- Bathrobes and slippers available on request
- Guests: 4 | Size: 35 m2
- Cabin code: MD
Expedition Suite | Large suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Large suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Large suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Large suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Large suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Large suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | Large suite - With balcony
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Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
Aft Corner Suite with private balcony and hot tub. Various sizes, large windows, flexible sleeping arrangements with double bed that can be divided into two single beds, some with sofa, TV, minibar, bathrobe, kettle, tea and coffee, espresso maker.
Upper-deck corner suite
- Private balcony
- Hot tub
- Seating area
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Bathrobes and slippers available on request
- Guests: 2 | Size: 20-30 m2
- Cabin code: MC
Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
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Expedition Suite | XL Suite
Extra Large Corner Suite without balcony. Aft corner suite with sofabed, flexible sleeping arrangements with double bed that can be divided into two single beds, large windows, TV, minibar, bathrobe, kettle, tea and coffee, espresso maker.
Extra-large lower-deck corner suite
- Large windows
- Seating area
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Double fold-down bed
- Bathtub
- Bathrobes and slippers available on request
- No balcony
- Guests: up to 4 | Size: 44 m2
- Cabin code: MB
Expedition Suite | XL Suite
Expedition Suite | XL Suite
Expedition Suite | XL Suite
Expedition Suite | XL Suite
Expedition Suite | XL Suite
Expedition Suite | XL Suite
Expedition Suite | XL Suite
Expedition Suite | XL Suite
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Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Extra Large Corner Suite with private balcony. Ship’s most spacious cabins with large windows, flexible sleeping arrangements with double bed that can be divided into two single beds, sofabed, TV, minibar, bathrobe, kettle, tea and coffee, espresso maker.
Extra-large upper-deck corner suite
- Private balcony
- Large windows
- Double bed (optional twin)
- Sofa bed
- Bathrobes and slippers available on request
- Guests: up to 4 | Size: 46-48 m2
- Cabin code: MA
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Polar Outside | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Middle deck
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - With balcony
Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - With balcony
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Arctic Superior | Wheelchair-accessible outside cabin with balcony
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Lower/middle decks
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Arctic Superior | Outside cabin - Upper deck
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Expedition Suite | Corner suite
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Expedition Suite | Suite - With balcony
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Expedition Suite | Large suite - With balcony
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Expedition Suite | Corner Suite
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Expedition Suite | XL Suite
MS Fridtjof Nansen – Expedition Suite | XL Suite - With balcony
Restaurants
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Lindstrøm
A speciality restaurant named after Adolf Lindstrøm, the favourite chef of the Norwegian polar heroes. Fine dining in Restaurant Lindstrøm is included for suite guests. Non-suite guests can enjoy breakfast, lunch and dinner in Lindstrøm for an additional cost.
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Aune
Named after the Norwegian ship chandler and polar expedition supplier Tinus Aune.
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Fredheim
The ships’ informal and social meeting place – named after a 1900s hunting station on Svalbard.
Deckplans
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Deck 11
- Running Track
- Outdoor Gym
- Observation Deck
- Running Track
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Deck 10
- Explorer Lounge & Bar
- Pool Deck
- Pool Bar
- Sauna
- Explorer Lounge & Bar
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Deck 9
- Lindstrom Restaurant
- Expedition Suites
- Arctic Superior Cabins
- Lindstrom Restaurant
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Deck 8
- Expedition Suites
- Arctic Superior Cabins
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Deck 7
- Observation Deck
- Gym
- Wellness Center
- Expedition Suites
- Arctic Superior Cabins
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Deck 6
- Aune Restaurant
- Fredheim Restaurant
- Shop
- Reception
- Expedition Team
- Science Center
- Lecture Halls
- Library
- Observation Deck
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Deck 5
- Expedition Suites
- Arctic Superior Cabins
- Outside Cabins
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Deck 4
- Gangway
- Arctic Superior Cabins
- Outside Cabins
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Deck 3
- Expedition Launch
- Medical Center
- Expedition Launch
Ready to Book?
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