The Main House remains the island’s social anchor, with a kitchen that spotlights local seafood, lamb and reindeer, and a second-floor library overlooking the strait. And when winter arrives, Manshausen has an advantage for aurora hopefuls up its knitted sleeve: the cabins’ floor-to-ceiling windows face directly into the island’s clearest northern sightline, meaning you can watch for color creeping across the sky without stepping outside—or even sitting up. Designed by a man who knows the polar night intimately, the place feels purpose-built for watching whatever the Arctic sky decides to offer.
Fordypningsrommet Fleinvær, Fleinvær Archipelago
Fordypningsrommet FleinværPhoto: Pasi Aalto
Hidden among the skerries of Fleinvær, Fordypningsrommet is a purpose-built playground for clear thinking and creative wandering. Founded by composer Håvard Lund, the island’s eco-friendly kebony-wood cabins teeter on steel stilts above the rock, scattered just loosely enough to feel like an experimental village. There’s a house for sleeping, another for cooking, one for bathing, one for playing an electric piano, plus the njalla—a spindly, birdhouse-like tower inspired by Sámi storage huts built atop tree trunks to protect their contents. Spark your imagination in the sea-air studio, roam the craggy paths, fire up the wood-heated sauna, or prepare communal dinners in the kitchen house, set to the soundtrack of eider ducks, otters, and the occasional fisherman’s boat passing through.