I have already posted a thread displaying photos of
fish racks used to hang the cod outdoors to dry. In earlier centuries, the employers provided the fishermen with a cabin, called a
rorbu (singular) and
rorbuer (plural) in Norwegian.
The fishermen would row their boats to their
rorbuer, which were built partially over the water for easy access. Beginning in the last half of the 20th century, all of the extant
rorbuer have now been upgraded with modern amenities for rental to tourists. Many small communities of
rorbuer have been built since then purely for the tourists; I suspect that most units in use today were originally built for the tourist trade but I haven't been able to verify that.
All of the
rorbuer have wooden exteriors and the historic units also have wooden interiors. Most are painted a brownish red color on the outside but some are a mustard color. Most roofs today are turf or slate but some are corrugated metal.
Photo 1
We stayed for a week in the
rorbu on the right. Both
rorbuer were originally built for fishermen, not tourists. Notice that the tide is near the high watermark. There were four tides each day that changed about 3 meters (10 feet).
Photo 3: typical slate roof
Photo 4: typical turf roof though gone awry