Furnaces that once poured molten glass in Moss have long gone cold, but the town's identity as a centre of Norwegian glassmaking, running from the 18th century into the 20th, still shapes its museums and its self-image. Around 50,000 people live in Moss today, on the eastern shore of the Oslofjord, a working port and industrial town that has quietly built a contemporary art reputation to sit alongside its manufacturing past.
That reputation centres on Galleri F 15, a contemporary art institution housed in a historic manor at Alby, whose exhibitions punch well above what a town of Moss's size would typically support. A short car ferry connects Moss directly across the fjord to Horten, cutting out a long road detour around the water and giving the town a practical role in regional east-west connections that many visitors never think to use.
Moss Glassworks operated for close to two centuries, from the 1700s through much of the 20th century, and the industry left a deep mark on the town's identity even after production wound down. Local museums preserve pieces from the factory's output and trace the industrial history that once employed a significant share of the town's workforce, giving visiting groups a grounded look at Norwegian manufacturing history beyond the more commonly told shipping and fishing stories.
Housed in a historic manor house at Alby on the fjord's edge, Galleri F 15 runs a contemporary art programme that has built a national reputation well beyond what Moss's population alone would suggest, with rotating exhibitions and a sculpture park in the surrounding grounds. The setting, a working manor estate rather than a purpose-built gallery, gives the visit a different character from most contemporary art spaces.
A regular car and passenger ferry runs across the Oslofjord between Moss and Horten, a crossing of around 30 minutes that saves a considerable road detour for anyone travelling between the fjord's eastern and western sides. For coach groups building an itinerary that pairs Moss with Horten's naval museum or the wider Vestfold coast, the direct ferry link is often the more practical routing than driving around via Drammen.
As a rough guide, a minibus (up to 19 seats) in Moss runs around 3,600 to 6,100 NOK per day, a midi-coach (around 35 seats) around 5,800 to 10,200 NOK per day, and a full-size coach (49 to 55 seats) around 8,700 to 15,500 NOK per day. Moss sits in the lower-mid range of the Norwegian market, with steady demand from its Oslofjord ferry crossing and regional commuter position. The final figure depends on your route, the date, and how long you need the vehicle. We confirm a fixed price with no hidden charges -- send your details for a free quote.
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