The Romsdal Museum in Molde, Norway, is an open-air folk museum containing over 40 heritage buildings from the 1600s to the 1900s.

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The Romsdal Museum in Molde, Norway, is an open-air folk museum containing over 40 heritage buildings from the 1600s to the 1900s.
The Leikarringen Children's Folk Group performs at the Romsdal Museum in Molde, Norway.
Eidestua at the open-air Romsdal Museum in Molde, Norway, is an 18th century farm house from Eidsbygda reassembled here in 1928.
The open-air Romsdal Museum at Molde, Norway, contains an 18th century storage house from Eidsbygda. The two small rooms downstairs were used to store wheat, flour, fish, and meat while the upstairs was for sleeping and storing clothing and linen.
A model ship dated 1804 hangs in the chapel of the Romsdal Museum in Molde, Norway.
The chapel at the Romsdal Museum in Molde, Norway, has a pulpit from 1665 and an altar from 1670. In summer the chapel is often used for weddings and baptisms.
In 1952 this chapel was added to the open-air Romsdal Museum in Molde, Norway. It exhibits two Norwegian building techniques of long standing: upright plants typical of medieval stave churches and characteristic log construction.
The Château (1918) in Molde, Norway, was built for Oscar Hanssen, owner of a local clothing factory. The formal garden surrounding the villa was designed by Marius Røhne. In 2004 the property was taken over by the Romsdal Museum and access is free.