The World's Largest Gingerbread Town | Pepperkakebyen in Bergen (2024)

The World's Largest Gingerbread Town | Pepperkakebyen in Bergen (1)

To the rest of the world, Pepperkakebyen is the world’s largest gingerbread town. To the people of Bergen, Christmas wouldn’t be Christmas without it.

By Emma Fast-Field

The first thing that strikes me as I walk into Pepperkakebyen is the scent, all pine trees and spices. The next is the light.

At Pepperkakebyen’s heart is an enormous room illuminated by a blue light like the Polar Night. It’s filled with gingerbread houses twinkling with fairy lights. There are candy-covered houses at toddlers-eye height, and church spires reaching for the ceiling. Gingerbread structures cling to the sides of mini mountains and spill out into the surrounding corridors. A model train puffs through it all, gentle festive music fills the air, and a bright full moon hangs in the corner.

The work that has gone into this place is spectacular.

A Bergen institution

The person behind Pepperkakebyen is Steinar Kristoffersen. In the early 1990s, when he was marketing director for Galleria, a shopping mall in the centre ofBergen, he was tasked with developing ideas for a new Christmas activity in the city centre venue: “So we started, in 1991, to build a gingerbread city,” he tells me, in his matter-of-fact way.

Pepperkakebyen is, and always has been, a city-wide community effort. “It started with kindergartens, schools, families, companies, and organisations,” says Steinar. “Now everyone attends and makes their own gingerbread constructions.” A few years ago, Bergen’s women’s prison contributed their dream prison, and Hurtigruten has made gingerbread ships for the harbor.

The gingerbread city is made of around 2,000 hand-made gingerbread buildings, varying in size and ambition from sweet-laden sheds to towering recreations of local churches. The original goal was to create a mini-Bergen, but contributors nowadays don’t always play by the rules; I spotted impressive recreations of Hogwarts from Harry Potter and Central Perk café from Friends!

Exactly which buildings are recreated doesn’t really matter though. The gingerbread constructions themselves aren’t nearly as important as the atmosphere Pepperkakebyen evokes, both for those who visit and for the hundreds who help create it.

As well as the gingerbread makers, there are designers, architects, and ticket booth volunteers. Working here is a rite of passage for many Bergen teens. All profits go to children’s charities, and there’s a gently competitive element but, as Steinar says, “the most important thing for us is to make a nice event in the pre-Christmas season.”

The World's Largest Gingerbread Town | Pepperkakebyen in Bergen (2)

A gingerbread wonderland

In Pepperkakebyen, I wander past gingerbread ships in a gingerbread harbor, a gingerbread tram stopped outside a gingerbread lighthouse, and a gingerbread zoo filled with gingerbread elephants, each one carefully made by a Bergen local. There’s a marshmallow unicorn in a gingerbread lavvu and a steam train chuffing past an enormous gingerbread castle with snow-covered turrets and glowing windows.

One of the seven dwarves, Doc, waves happily to me from the balcony of a multi-storey gingerbread house. Rows of gingerbread people – some attached to carefully cut-out faces of the people who made this piece – pack a gingerbread stadium to watch gingerbread football teams play on a sugar-dusted gingerbread pitch. And in one little corner, I spy a liquorice centipede nibbling at a bright red mushroom with white-icing spots.

Chocolate drops, colorful candies, and piped icing sugar cover almost every surface – apart from the spots where the sweets have proved irresistible to little hands! Kids under 2 can enter for free, as can everyone who contributed, as well as children under 12 on weekdays. The temptation I feel to pluck a piece to nibble is strong – and I’ve just had brunch.

The World's Largest Gingerbread Town | Pepperkakebyen in Bergen (3)

The World's Largest Gingerbread Town | Pepperkakebyen in Bergen (4)

The World's Largest Gingerbread Town | Pepperkakebyen in Bergen (5)

A new tradition

I’m speaking to Steinar after my visit to Pepperkakebyen, in a food tent in Bergen’s Christmas market – another local festive institution. Outside, it’s raining – this is Bergen, after all – but inside it’s cosy and warm from the heat of people sipping gløgg and hot chocolate topped off with a tower of whipped cream.

More than 30 years after his first flash of inspiration, it’s clear that Steinar is still completely dedicated to the project – and something of a local celebrity because of it. Everyone seems to know who Steinar is, and he frequently pauses during our chat to return the waves and nods of people passing by.

In between these friendly interactions, he tells me how Pepperkakebyen has grown, and why it’s about far more than just its size: “Now we have about 8,000 visitors each year and some say it wouldn’t be Christmas without it. It's become an essential part of the season for many people. It's a new tradition.”

Gunvor Rasmussen, an illustrator and owner of a quirky studio in Bergen’s UNESCO-listed Bryggen area, agrees. “Pepperkakebyen has been a huge part of my Christmases since the ‘90s. I can’t really remember a time that it wasn’t there. It was a way to make our own Christmas tradition when everything else was already steeped in tradition. When you start making gingerbread with friends every year, it becomes A Thing. It wasn’t always about making something very beautiful, it was the fun of doing it.”

And it does sound like a lot of fun! “A friend and I made a witch's cottage in our metal period, when we made everything goth! Then we made a wonky wizard's tower, and once we made a castle – or rather it didn't look like a castle, but it was a good attempt,” she remembers. “We’ve also made a normal gingerbread house overloaded with everything pink and candy. This year [2022], I recreated my studio. I put a gallery inside so you could look at original pieces of art, and a sign outside saying ‘Open’.”

A gingerbread world

The love and care – and humor – that goes into creating Pepperkakebyen is tangible. It’s easy to see why the gingerbread city tradition has caught on, “especially in the north of Norway, and where the Hurtigruten travels,” says Steinar, but also around the world.

In Norway, you can see gingerbread cities in Stavanger,Hammerfest, Haugesund, Fredrikstad, andBodø, and Norwegian communities across the USA create them too. An annual effort in Minnesota has grown to more than 250 houses.

Bergen’s Pepperkakebyen is huge and the largest by area, but a rival gingerbread town in New York City is the official holder of the World’s Largest Gingerbread Village record. Why? The crucial distinction is that New York City’s ‘Gingerbread Lane’, handmade by Jon Lovitch every year, is fully edible, whereas Bergen’s revels in its joyous jumble of edible gingerbread and sweets alongside inedible trains, tiny trees strung with real fairy lights, and delightfully incongruous figurines.

“It was not part of my vision that it should spread. But I am happy that it has,” Steinar tells me. Happy is how I feel when I leave Pepperkakebyen, too. It’s impossible not to be inspired by its lovingly handmade creations and festive community spirit I think as I step back outside into the Bergen rain. And yes, I buy a few gingerbread house kits before I go. Feeling all warm inside, I vow to start a new tradition at home.

Explore Norway in winter with Hurtigruten

  • Up to 30% off12 days • 34 PlacesThe Coastal ExpressRoute Bergen – Kirkenes – Bergen (Roundtrip)Departure Dates Regular departuresPrice from $1,853$1,575Ships Multiple
The World's Largest Gingerbread Town | Pepperkakebyen in Bergen (2024)

FAQs

The World's Largest Gingerbread Town | Pepperkakebyen in Bergen? ›

The world's biggest gingerbread city. Miniature houses, trains, cars and ships made from real gingerbread. Schools and kindergartens contribute every year in making a miniature version of Bergen - all in gingerbread-cookies!

What is the biggest gingerbread town in the world? ›

The World's Largest Gingerbread Town | Pepperkakebyen in Bergen | Hurtigruten.

Where is the gingerbread capital of the world? ›

Nuremberg was recognized as the "Gingerbread Capital of the World" when in the 1600s the guild started to employ master bakers and skilled workers to create complicated works of art from gingerbread. Medieval bakers used carved boards to create elaborate designs.

Where is the world's largest gingerbread house located? ›

Enlisting the help of a number of local contractors and organizations, including a commercial and residential roofing company to top it all off, they built the house at the Traditions Club in Bryan, Texas.

In what city in Norway do they make an entire village out of gingerbread? ›

The first Gingerbread Town in Bergen was made in 1991. Every year since, kindergartens, schools, private persons, offices, organizations are all contributing with their gingerbread houses.

What town is famous for gingerbread? ›

Victorian cook Sarah Nelson invented Grasmere Gingerbread® in 1854 in the English Lake District village from where it gets its name. A unique, spicy-sweet cross between a biscuit and cake, its reputation quickly spread and it is now enjoyed by food lovers all over the world.

What city is known for gingerbread? ›

TORUN, Poland — This medieval city on the banks of the Vistula River is known for two things: astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus and gingerbread cookies.

Which German city is famous for gingerbread? ›

In Germany, when you think of Christmas, you think of Nuremberg Lebkuchen, the city's famous gingerbread. These sweet and spicy treats have been baked for more than 600 years and are loved by young and old alike. Orignial Nuremberg Elisenlebkuchen - a culinary delight!

What country did gingerbread come from? ›

Gingerbread, as we know it today, was first found in the Belgian city of Dinant, then adopted and modified by the people of Aachen, Germany (hence the name Aachener Printen). It was later altered even further in the Franconian convents. The nuns baked the cookies for dessert.

What is the dark history of gingerbread? ›

​Superstitions about gingerbread flourished in the 17th century. Witches supposedly made gingerbread figures, ate them, and thereby caused the death of their enemies. Dutch magistrates went so far as to declare baking or eating molded cookies illegal.

What is the world record for gingerbread village? ›

Jon Lovitch spends the entire year planning, baking, and building houses for the holiday season. He holds the Guinness World Record for the largest entirely edible gingerbread village — 1,251 houses.

Where is the giant gingerbread house? ›

The Gingerbread House at the Fairmont San Francisco is a sight to behold, boasting 7,750 real gingerbread bricks, 1,500 pounds of royal icing, and 700 pounds of candy.

What is the world's largest gingerbread city? ›

Bergen's Pepperkakebyen is huge and the largest by area, but a rival gingerbread town in New York City is the official holder of the World's Largest Gingerbread Village record.

Is gingerbread from Sweden? ›

A brief history

Gingerbread was first brought to Europe in 992 CE by the Armenian monk Gregory of Nicopolis when he taught French Christians the art of gingerbread baking. Later, during the 13th century, gingerbread was brought to Sweden by German immigrants.

What store made the largest gingerbread man? ›

In world records

According to the Guinness Book of Records, the world's largest gingerbread man was made by the staff of the IKEA Furuset store in Oslo, Norway, on 9 November 2009. The gingerbread man weighed 1435.2 pounds (651 kg).

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Aron Pacocha

Last Updated:

Views: 5890

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (48 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Aron Pacocha

Birthday: 1999-08-12

Address: 3808 Moen Corner, Gorczanyport, FL 67364-2074

Phone: +393457723392

Job: Retail Consultant

Hobby: Jewelry making, Cooking, Gaming, Reading, Juggling, Cabaret, Origami

Introduction: My name is Aron Pacocha, I am a happy, tasty, innocent, proud, talented, courageous, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.