Roslagen



Norrtälje, the uncrowned capital of Roslagen.

Roslagen[dead link] is the coastal region of the Uppland province in Sweden, east of Stockholm and Uppsala. No longer a formal political entity, it is divided between Stockholm County, containing Lidingö, Vaxholm, Österåker, Norrtälje, and Uppsala County, containing Östhammar, Tierp and Älvkarleby municipalities.

These municipalities administer several islands of different sizes, such as Ljusterö, Blidö, Yxlan and others; these are described in the Stockholm Archipelago article.

See Stockholm/Norrort for Danderyd, Täby and Vallentuna.

Destinations[edit]

The Wikivoyage articles covering Roslagen, from north to south, are

  • 1 Älvkarleby – at the outlet of Dalälven River, considered the natural border to Norrland.
  • 2 Tierp – a small town between Uppsala and Gävle.
  • 3 Östhammar – famous for the Walloon iron industry and the sea-side resort Öregrund.
  • 4 Norrtälje – the largest coastal town in Roslagen.
  • 5 Lidingö – an inner suburb of Stockholm.
  • 6 Stockholm archipelago – thousands of islands and skerries scattered along the Roslagen coast.

Other destinations[edit]

Gräsö.

Understand[edit]

Get in[edit]

Kapellskär.

Public transport is operated by SL in Vaxholm, Österåker and Norrtälje municipalities, and by UL in Östhammar, Tierp and Älvkarleby municipalities. Trains call at Tierp and Älvkarleby.

From Stockholm by bus from Tekniska Högskolan (Östermalm). Roslagsbanan is a rail line from Stockholm to Åkersberga.

Baltic Sea ferries from Åland and mainland Finland connect to Stockholm and Kapellskär.

Get around[edit]

Public transport is scarce, but you get wherever you want with a car. A no-cost car ferry operates between Östhammar and Gräsö.

See[edit]

The maritime scenery.

Itineraries[edit]

Do[edit]

Fishing, hiking and swimming.

Eat[edit]

Drink[edit]

Stay safe[edit]

Go next[edit]

This region article is an extra-hierarchical region, describing a region that does not fit into the hierarchy Wikivoyage uses to organise most articles. These extra articles usually provide only basic information and links to articles in the hierarchy. This article can be expanded if the information is specific to the page; otherwise new text should generally go in the appropriate region or city article.