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Norwegian Property is a real estate company that has a portfolio in Oslo and Stavanger, Norway. Created in 2006 and listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange , it invests in major commercial real estate , offering its owners a publicly traded real estate portfolio, consisting of 762,000 square meters bought for NOK 19 billion.
[2] Some parts of the public real estate are managed by other agencies, including railways , the military , and healthcare facilities. Part of the government portfolio, which is subject to competition, is managed by the limited company Entra Eiendom , which was demerged from the Norwegian Directorate of Public Construction and Property in 2000.
Two Norwegian property laws, which are so ancient that the time of their enactment is lost, govern Norwegian property. These are the Åsetesrett (homestead right), and the Odelsrett (also referred to as allodial right). These two rights were considered important enough that they were included in the 1814 Constitution of Norway.
The Arctic archipelago of Svalbard has just one unsold private property, listed at €300 million—but the Norwegian government is fighting to block its sale Prarthana Prakash July 2, 2024 at 3:58 AM
The Norwegian Industrial Property Office (Norwegian: Patentstyret [2] or Patentstyrets første avdeling [3]), also known as Norwegian Patent Office (Norwegian: Patentstyret), is a government agency responsible for registration of patents, trademarks and design in Norway.
The Norwegian church sale (Norwegian: kirkesalget) was a comprehensive and systematic sale of most of the church properties in Norway during the 1720s. The purpose of this sale was the intention of improving the poor public finances in the Kingdom of Denmark-Norway after the Great Northern War .
Brønnøysund Register Centre (Norwegian Bokmål: Brønnøysundregistrene; formal name Registerenheten i Brønnøysund, Norwegian Nynorsk: Brønnøysundregistra) is a Norwegian government agency that is responsible for the management of numerous public registers for Norway, and governmental systems for digital exchange of information.
A Norwegian mass murderer has won part of a human-rights case against the government. Anders Behring Breivik, a right-wing extremist who was responsible for the deaths of 77 people in Norway in ...