Villa Paus (Pausvillaen) is a listed villa in Oslo, Norway. It is located at Christian Benneches vei 6 in Bygdøy.
History
The villa was built in 1907 for the iron and steel industrialist Ole Paus (1846-1931), a member of the Paus family, founder of the steel company Ole Paus and chairman of the commercial bank Den norske Creditbank (now DNB ASA). It combines Neo-Baroque and Art Nouveau influences. The property comprises about 1200 square meters, including ten main rooms, rooms for servants and a big hall, and originally had around 7 decare park and 80 metres shoreline. In the 1970s five new villas were built on parts of the park which were partitioned off.[1]
During the German occupation of Norway during World War II, the villa was used as the summer residence of Josef Terboven (1898-1945), German Civilian Administrator of Norway.[2] [3]
From 1953 it was owned by the barrister Mathias Dahl-Hansen and his family. In 1997, the villa was sold to the billionaire Petter Stordalen, one of Norway's richest men.[1] In 1999 Finansavisen described the villa as Norway's most expensive residence[2] and in 2016 the business magazine Kapital estimated the villa to be worth 150 million kroner (ca. 16 million euro).[4][5]
In front of the villa there is a three-meter luminous statue of Buddha. The sculpture is called "Sitting Tattoo with Mountains."[6]
References
- 1 2 Helge Meland and Tor Inge Vormedal, Perler ved Oslofjorden, ISBN 9788292879450, p. 152
- 1 2 Finanskongens kongebolig in Dagbladet
- ↑ "Josef Terboven". Store norske leksikon. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
- ↑ Slik er milliardærenes Bygdøy-luksus in Hegnar
- ↑ "Petter Stordalen". Store norske leksikon. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
- ↑ Stordalen har tre meter høy lysende Buddha i hagen i Hegnar Online