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fiogf49gjkf0d NARVIK
was established less than a century ago as an ice-free port to handle the iron ore brought by train from northern Sweden, and the
iron ore docks
are still immediately conspicuous upon arrival, the rust-coloured machinery overwhelming the whole waterfront. There are guided tours of the iron ore terminal (1 daily; 30kr; times vary - ask at tourist office), interesting if only for the opportunity to spend ninety minutes amid such giant, ore-stained contraptions. Otherwise the town centre lacks appeal, with modern stone and concrete replacing the wooden buildings flattened during the last war. Nonetheless, try and devote an hour or so to the
Krigsminne Museum
(mid-June to Aug Mon-Sat 10am-10pm, Sun 11am-5pm; March to mid-June & Sept daily 10am-4pm; 30kr), in the main square close to the docks. Run by the Red Cross, it documents the wartime German saturation bombing and bitter sea and air battles for control of the ore supplies, in which hundreds of foreign servicemen died alongside the many locals.
The
train station
is at the north end of town and long-distance
buses
pull up outside. From here, it's a five- to ten-minute walk south along the main street to the main square, where the
tourist office
(mid-June to mid-Aug Mon-Fri 9am-7pm, Sat 10am-7pm, Sun noon-7pm; late Aug daily 11am-5pm; rest of year Mon-Fri 9am-4pm) issues free maps and has a wide range of leaflets on the region's attractions. The best place
to stay
is the
Briedablikk Gjestehus
, Tore Hundsgate 41 (tel 76 94 14 18; ?20-25/$32-40), a well-tended guest house, a short, stiff walk from the tourist office at the top of Kinobakken. The nearest
campsite
,
Narvik Camping
, is along the E6 about 2km north of town and has cabins for rent (250kr).
Other useful information
for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):
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