Nordstrand

Nordstrand, Oslo, Norway
category: boundary — type: administrative — OSM: relation 1279946

Items with no match found in OSM

70 items

Nordstrand bad (Q19383374)
item type: Badestrand
Summary from Nynorsk / Norwegian Nynorsk Wikipedia (nnwiki)

Nordstrand bad på Nordstrand i Oslo er ein offentleg badeplass med ei badebryggje, eiga sandstrand og gangveg langs sjøen. Badeplassen ligg 200 meter sør for brua over til Ulvøya, med ein bratt asfaltert gangveg ned frå Mosseveien.

Sundvollen Formation (Q17511522)
item type: formation
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Sundvollen Formation is a geologic formation cropping out along the northern and eastern shores of Steinsfjorden, Oslo Region, Norway. It preserves fossils dating back to the Gorstian to Ludfordian stages (Rootsiküla in the regional stratigraphy) of the Late Silurian period.

KFUM Arena (Q74124387)
item type: fotballstadion
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

KFUM Arena is a football stadium located at Ekeberg in Oslo, Norway, and is the home of Norwegian 1. divisjon club KFUM Oslo. The stadium has a current capacity of approximately 1,500 spectators. KFUM is a translation of the English language YMCA.

Nordstrand Arena (Q116889937)
item type: multi-purpose hall

Street address: Oberst Rodes vei 79, 1165 Oslo (from Wikidata)

website: https://www.nordstrand-if.no/

Norway Cup (Q1772544)
item type: fotballturnering
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Norway Cup is an international youth football tournament in Oslo, Norway. It has been held annually since 1972, with the exception of 1976 (due to a conflicting arrangement), 2020 and 2021 (due to the COVID-19 Pandemic). It is the world's largest football tournament and sees a typical 1400 to 1700 participating teams per year - in 2023 Norway Cup hit an all-time record with 2183 teams. . The Norway Cup consists of tournaments for ages 10 through 19 for both genders, with over 53,049 teams having participated during its history. The tournament takes place at Ekebergsletta.

website: https://norwaycup.no

Stordø Kisgruber (Q12718670)
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Stordø Kisgruber was a Norwegian mining company which operated the pyrite mines in Litlabø at Stord in Hordaland, Norway.

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: 1968 disestablishments in Norway
Sjursøya train accident (Q3432033)
item type: togulykke / Runaway train
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Sjursøya train accident was a railway accident that occurred on 24 March 2010 at around 13:15 local time, when a set of 16 freight cars began to roll uncontrollably during shunting on Alnabru, north in Oslo. The train dispatcher central chose to lead the runaway train in the direction of Sjursøya, along the Loenga–Alnabru Line, where it derailed and rolled through a Statoil building in the terminal area at Sjursøya, a peninsula which is part of the Oslo ports facilities. The line leading to the container and petroleum port at Sjursøya is a branch of Østfold Line, and is only used at low speeds. However, the empty carriages crashed into the harbour terminal at an estimated speed of more than 100 km/h (62 mph). At the most, the set of wagons had a speed of 90–140 km/h.

Ekeberg (Q4587972)
item type: høydedrag
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Ekeberg is a neighborhood in the city of Oslo, Norway. The Norway Cup soccer tournament takes place at Ekebergsletta every summer. "Sletta" means "the plain". The painting "The Scream" by Edvard Munch is painted from Utsikten ("the view"), a part of Ekeberg.

Sjursøya (Q4574607)
item type: halvøy / tied island
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Sjursøya is a peninsula located in Oslo, Norway. The peninsula is entirely used by the Port of Oslo as a container and petroleum port, and serves as the primary oil port for Eastern Norway.

Bekkelaget Station (Q11960470)
item type: jernbanestasjon / holdeplass
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Bekkelaget Station (Norwegian: Bekkelaget stasjon) was a railway station on the Østfold Line. It was located at Nedre Bekkelaget in the Nordstrand borough of Oslo, Norway. It was originally situated 3.34 kilometers (2.08 mi) from Oslo Central Station (Oslo S) and received a station building designed by Peter Andreas Blix. It was named Bækkelaget until 1921.

UIC station code: 7600500

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: 1983 disestablishments in Norway, Railway stations closed in 1983, Railway stations in Norway closed in the 20th century
Bekkelaget Tunnel (Q25067129)
item type: jernbanetunnel
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Bekkelaget Tunnel (Norwegian: Bekkelagstunnelen) is a 578-meter (1,896 ft) long railway tunnel which carries two tracks of the Østfold Line past Bekkelaget in Oslo, Norway. Construction started 14 April 1955, after a landslide on 3 October 1953 had caused damage to the railway. The tunnel was built to allow for space for the road of Mosseveien. The tunnel opened on 7 October 1958. Bekkelaget Station was located on the section of track which was closed, and a new station was built at the southern mouth. It closed on 29 May 1983.

Ormsund Roklub (Q7103493)
item type: rowing club
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Ormsund Roklub is a rowing club from Oslo, Norway.

website: https://www.ormsund.no/

Stolperstein dedicated to Elias Plavnik (Q44180392)
item type: Stolperstein

Street address: Solveien 112, Oslo (from Wikidata)

Stolperstein dedicated to Harry Steinmann (Q44180406)
item type: Stolperstein

Street address: Solveien 112, Oslo (from Wikidata)

Stolperstein dedicated to Oscar Plavnik (Q44180424)
item type: Stolperstein

Street address: Solveien 112, Oslo (from Wikidata)

Stolperstein dedicated to Charles Schermann (Q44180902)
item type: Stolperstein

Street address: Mosseveien 203, Oslo (from Wikidata)

Stolperstein dedicated to Oskar Schermann (Q44180912)
item type: Stolperstein

Street address: Mosseveien 203, Oslo (from Wikidata)

Stolperstein dedicated to Willy Schermann (Q44180916)
item type: Stolperstein

Street address: Mosseveien 203, Oslo (from Wikidata)

Stolperstein dedicated to Liebali Liv Hirsch (Q44181370)
item type: Stolperstein

Street address: Oberst Rodes vei 86, Oslo (from Wikidata)

Villa Gräpling (Q18822170)
item type: villa
Summary from Nynorsk / Norwegian Nynorsk Wikipedia (nnwiki)

Sjursøytunnelen (Q12000743)
item type: veitunnel
Summary from Deutsch / German Wikipedia (dewiki)

Sjursøytunnelen ist ein 270 Meter langer Tunnel in Oslo, der Hauptstadt Norwegens.