Restaurant Schrøder

Restaurant Schrøder is a restaurant in Waldemar Thranes gate 8 at St. Hanshaugen in Oslo, Norway. This restaurant appeared in several fictional works including Jo Nesbø's books about Harry Hole and several books by Bjørg Vik.

Restaurant Schrøder
Restaurant Schrøder
Restaurant information
Food typeNorwegian cuisine
European cuisine
Street address59°55′24.352″N 10°44′22.394″E
Waldemar Thranes gate 8
CityOslo
County Norway
Postal/ZIP CodeN-0171
CountryNorway
Websitewww.restaurant-schroder.no

Schrøder in Torggata 14 from 1925 to 1954

In 1925, Hans Schrøder took over Elise Pettersens café which had been operating in the corner building of Torggata/Hammersborggata since 1912, one block north of Youngstorget, with a view towards Arbeidersamfunnets plass. The restaurant lay on the same corner as the Oslo Workers' Society (Norwegian: Oslo Arbeidersamfunn), and was an important link between the meetings there.

Male waiters had black pants, white jackets and a cloth draped over their arms. The female waiters had black silk aprons. Schrøder had live music, including Martin Bækkelunds accordion, and his sons Kjell and Rolf who debuted here on the piano and violin respectively. The building was torn down in 1954 in connection with the building of the new Folkets hus.

Restaurant in Waldemar Thranes gate

In 1956 Schrøder moved into the new building in Waldemar Thranes gate 8, near the intersection of Waldemar Thranes gate and Ullevålsveien, which is the heart of St. Hanshaugen with shopping and restaurants. A restaurant had been run in the old building since 1900 when Frk. Glansins Restaurant was established. Hilmar Hansen ran the Terrasse-Restaurant from 1923 to 1953. The building was torn down in 1954, and Schrøder moved into the new building upon completion in 1956. The building was designed by the architect G. T. Schulz. Georg Karlson, who had been running Schrøder since 1946, continued on and lived with his family in the building.[1] There were two pillars in the middle of the premises and a small porch by the entrance. The tables were dressed first with red tablecloths and then with a smaller white tablecloth placed diagonally on top. For the past 20 years with the current owners, the interior has remained unchanged. After July 1, 2004, when the no-smoking law came into effect in Norway, the restaurant was painted to remove the smoke odour.

Paintings from 1926 by Sigurd Fosnes hang on the walls,[2] depicting Bergfjerdingen (the stairs up to Damstredet), Torggata with the first Torggata Bad and from the corner of the building where the restaurant was located, the wooden house district in Telthusbakken, the former wooden house district at Enerhaugen and a several meter wide picture from Youngstorget. There was live music at Schrøder in 1960s, and doorman Holm sung with the accompaniment of Sigurd Dahl on the piano and waiter Trygve Nilsen on the violin. The restaurant was well known as the place to go before and after sporting events at Bislett Stadium, such as the World Championships in speed skating.[3]

The Menu

Wiener Schnitzel at Restaurant Schrøder

The restaurant serves traditional Norwegian café and restaurant style food, such as pork and sauce and Wiener Schnitzel. Entrecôte, meat patties and plaice were on the menu in 1957 and are still there in 2016. In November and December, the traditional Christmas dishes pinnekjøtt and lutefisk, are served in the evenings and Schrøder generally has full occupancy during this time.

Harry Hole and the Award An alright guy/An alright lady

Schrøder is the fictional character’s Harry Hole, who is a police investigator in several of Jo Nesbø’s novels, second home, with his regular table farthest in beside the window, where there was enough light to read the newspaper. Harry lived in Sofies gate 5, a few hundred meters from Schrøder.[4]

Citywalks in Harry Holes footsteps visits the restaurant.[5] The movie based on the novel The Snowman (Norwegian: Snømannen) was filmed in January to March 2016 in Oslo, also in Schrøder.[6]

Jo Nesbø hands out the awards for An Alright guy/An Alright Lady (Norwegian: En ålreit fyr/Ei ålreit dame) at Schrøder. The award was established in i 2008 by the Harry Hole-foundation,[7] and the foundation together with the award recipient gives a donation of a half a million Norwegian krones to promote basic reading and writing skills in developing countries.[8]

Bjørg Vik and Schrøder

The author Bjørg Viks father worked at Schrøder, and the restaurant in Torggata is an important place in the novel Små nøkler, store rom from 1988.[9] In Elsi Lund from 1994 the father has temporary posts in other restaurants until the restaurant in Waldemar Thranes gate opens.[10]

gollark: I wasn't aware of this "libMusicFS", so it's not the same, no.
gollark: https://pastebin.com/SPyr8jrh has a rough specification.
gollark: The eXtensible Tape Metadata Format.
gollark: You should consider making your thing write XTMF-compatible metadata. It supports a `speed` thing for playback, so any XTMF player would be able to play it back right and seek to tracks and such.
gollark: Is your software XTMF-compatible?

References

  1. Johnsen, page 23–28.
  2. Johnsen, page 25.
  3. Johnsen, page 28–29.
  4. På Harry (Hole)-tur i Oslo. vg.no, 21 September 2013 and Harry Holes Oslo. dagbladet.no, 4 April 2007. (both visited 22 January 2016)
  5. I Harry Holes fotspor. Oslo Guidebureau, 23. november 2013. Archived 2016-01-30 at the Wayback Machine (visited 22 January 2016)
  6. «Snømannen» spilles inn i Oslo. NHO Reiseliv, 30. oktober 2015. CEO Kristin Krohn Devold interviewed at Schrøder. Archived 2016-01-29 at the Wayback Machine (visited 22 January 2016) and Her er «Snømannen»-teamet på plass på Restaurant Schrøder. nrk.no, 16 March 2016 (visited 18 March 2016)
  7. Får en halv million av Jo Nesbø. dagbladet.no, 20 December 2011. (visited 22 January 2016)
  8. Gir av overskudd fra bokinntekter til veldige formål. aftenposten.no, 1 September 2013 (visited 22 January 2016)
  9. Små nøkler, store rom. Cappelen, 1988. (visited 29 January 2016)
  10. Elsi Lund. Cappelen. 1994. First meeting with the new Schøder is described on page 345f. (visited 29 January 2016)

Literature

  • Per-Erling Johnsen: Brune kafeer. Oslos uforanderlige møtesteder. Oslo, Schibsted, 2005.
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