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Ice hotel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Temporary hotel made up of snow and blocks of ice

The entrance ofIcehotel inJukkasjärvi, Sweden, 2007, with twokicksleds outside
Patrons at theice bar atSnowCastle of Kemi, 2007

Anice hotel is a temporaryhotel made up ofsnow and sculpted blocks ofice.[1] Ice hotels, dependent on sub-freezing temperatures, are constructed from ice and snow and typically have to be rebuilt every year. Ice hotels exist in several countries, and they have varying construction styles, services and amenities, the latter of which may includeice bars, restaurants,chapels, saunas and hot tubs.

Overview

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Ice hotels are promoted for adventuroustravelers who are interested innovelties and unusual environments and are comfortable with the outdoors.[1][2] Customers have to be prepared to sleep in beds made of snow or ice, but in the warmth of furs, blankets andsleeping bags designed to withstand extremely cold temperatures. Temperature in the rooms is below zero Celsius, but much warmer than outside. Staying at an ice hotel is expensive as prices for a night range from around US$300 to $3,000.[2] Some ice hotels may bedestination hotels.[3]

Lobbies are often filled withice sculptures, and food and drinks are specially chosen for the circumstances.[1] For instance, glasses in an ice bar can be made of ice and people sit on benches made of ice.[2] Anice bar, sometimes associated with an ice hotel, is a drinking establishment primarily made of ice.

Construction

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Ice hotels are dependent upon sub-freezing temperatures (colder than 0 °C or 32 °F) during construction and operation. This imposes time constraints on construction and makes the hotel's season short. Construction typically begins between November and March when snow can be compacted and thick levels of ice form. Although constructing an ice hotel is more labor-intensive than a regular building, building materials are cheaper.[2] Ice hotels have to be reconstructed every year.[1] This is not entirely detrimental to the operators; if an ice hotel does not meet its financial goals, the owner can simply let the building melt in the spring and is left with no building to permanently upkeep.[2]

The walls, fixtures, and fittings are made entirely of ice or compacted snow, and are held together using a substance known assnice, which takes the place of mortar in a traditional brick-built hotel. Sometimes steel framing is used in their construction.[4][5]

By country

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Canada

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Ice Hotel

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TheHôtel de Glace (English:Ice Hotel) first opened in January 2001. 85 rooms are furnished with ice beds covered with deer furs and mattresses and equipped with arctic sleeping bags.[1] It was originally located on the shores ofLac-Saint-Joseph, Quebec, 31 minutes north ofQuebec City, but has since moved closer to the city, 10 minutes away from Old Town Quebec.[6] It operates from the first week in January to the last week in March.[7] It has the adjacent Le Quatre Temps restaurant, an ice bar named Absolut Ice Bar, which servesAbsolut Vodka and other beverages, sauna and outdoor hot tub.[3][8] Construction involves the use of blocks of ice and snow.[8] In 2005, construction involved "400 tons of clear ice blocks, trucked in from Montreal, and 12,000 tons of snow produced on site."[8] Beds are constructed of ice, which are topped with "a wooden boxspring and mattress",[3] and mummy-style sleeping bags are provided.[3] The hotel offers paid tours, the participants of which are allowed to use the ice bar until midnight.[3] Ice Hotel was previously the only ice hotel in North America.[3]

  • Ice Hotel
  • The chapel, 2006
    The chapel, 2006
  • The chapel, 2006
    The chapel, 2006

Snow Village

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Snow Village is a half-hectare village and 30-room ice hotel located inParc Jean-Drapeau, east ofMontreal, in Quebec, Canada that first opened in 2012.[9] It has suites, standard rooms and igloos, an ice restaurant, ice bar and patio, ice chapel and outdoor hot tubs.[9] It is constructed from man-made snow created bysnowmaking machines, which is blown onto frames that are removed when construction is complete.[9] This is performed because the density of the artificial snow is greater than that of natural snow.[9] The hotel is equipped with fire alarms that are built into snow walls, as required by the city of Montreal.[9] Initial construction cost $2.1 million, and the Quebec government provided some financial support for its construction.[9]

Finland

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SnowCastle of Kemi

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TheSnowCastle of Kemi inKemi, Finland is the largestsnow fort in the world, is rebuilt every winter and has a snow hotel[10] with double rooms and a honeymoon suite. The facility also has a restaurant, chapel, and ice sculptures.[10] It is near theGulf of Bothnia.[10] The style of the facility, including the theme, shape, size and decorations, changes annually.[10]

  • SnowCastle of Kemi
  • A view in 2006
    A view in 2006
  • The dining room in February 2013
    The dining room in February 2013

Lainio Snow Village

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The Lainio Snow Village is located 150 km north of the Arctic Circle inLapland.[11] This snow hotel is built in the winter atop a wood building. In 2007, construction began in November, and in December, it began providing lodging.[11] The hotel has restrooms and a sauna, and the village has a restaurant.[11] Rooms are decorated with artwork created from snow.[11] In 2007, art students contributed to the art with professional artists.[11] In the summer, the village provides log cabin lodging.[11]

Japan

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The Alpha Resort Tomamu in the Shimukappu village ofHokkaido Island in Japan builds and opens an ice hotel every year.[12] It may be Japan's first ice hotel, and everything in it is constructed from ice.[12][13] The hotel interiors are typically −3 to −5 °C. Guests dine on ice tables and sit on ice chairs covered with sheepskin. The hotel provides sheepskin apparel for guests to stay warm.[12]

Norway

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Ice Bar

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Ice Bar, run by Ice Hotel, is a bar located in downtownOslo, Norway[14] which serves drinks all year long in an artificially frozen environment.

Ice Lodge

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The Ice Lodge inNorway is part of the Bjorligard Hotel.[15] It is the largest ice hotel in Norway, and its season is longer than other ice hotels due to its elevation at 1,250 metres (4,100 ft) above sea level.[15]

Kirkenes Snow Hotel

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The Kirkenes Snow Hotel is located inFinnmark, Norway, the easternmost and northernmost county in Norway.[16] The hotel is 15 km from the Norwegian-Russian border[16] and first opened in 2006.[17] It had 20 rooms and the largest snow dome in Norway (8 metres high and 12 metres in diameter). All the rooms were individually decorated by ice artists from Finland and Japan. The west Snow Hall was decorated by local sculptor Arild Wara. A night in the snow hotel is combined with a special dinner prepared on an open fire.[16] Visitors can get a sauna before or after staying at the hotel. The hotel has an ice bar,[16] areindeer park, and ahusky farm.

Sorrisniva Igloo Hotel

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Sorrisniva Igloo Hotel is located in ruralAlta Municipality, about 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of the town ofAlta.[18] The igloo hotel has been rebuilt yearly since 1999.[19] It isEurope’s northernmost ice hotel, as it is in theFinnmark region and is approximately 250 kilometres (160 mi) from theNorth Cape. The 2,000-square-metre (22,000 sq ft) hotel has 30 rooms, including twosuites. It is decorated with ice sculptures and ice furnishings, including lighting systems which enhance the different types of crystalline formations. Besides the bedrooms the hotel contains an ice chapel, ice gallery and ice bar where drinks are served in glasses made of ice. Additional facilities include a sauna and outdoor bathtubs with hot water.[20] The ice sculptures at the hotel change yearly.[19] The Sorrisniva Igloo Hotel in Alta has a changing theme every year. In 2004, it was a Viking theme, in 2005, Norwegian fairytales, and in 2006, the theme was wild animals of the region. To stay warm when sleeping, guests use sleeping bags that sit on top ofreindeer hides.[18][20]

  • Sorrisniva Igloo Hotel
  • Entrance to the ice bar
    Entrance to the ice bar
  • Interior of the ice bar
    Interior of the ice bar

Romania

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Ice Church in Romania, 2011

Bâlea Lake Ice Hotel, the first ice hotel inEastern Europe was built in 2006 inRomania, deep in theFăgăraș Mountains, at an elevation of 2034 meters above sea level. In winter, it is only accessible bycable car, since the national road DN7, theTransfăgărășan, is closed in the winter.[21]

This picturesque setting is next toBâlea Lake,[22] where each year local craftsmen wait for the lake to freeze, before using the ice to build the small 12-room Ice Hotel and its adjacent Ice Church, Ice Restaurant and Ice Bar.[22] Local artists imitate sculptures by Romanian modernist sculptor,Constantin Brâncuși. Typically the hotel is completed in December and is open until it melts in late March or April.[22]

Bedding, furs, specialist sleeping bags are all provided, with bathroom facilities nearby. There are two chalets within walking distance, which also provide accommodation. Activities such as skiing, sledging or riding a snow bike are on offer. Those who are more organised and adventurous can arrangeheliskiing.

The Bâlea Lake Ice Hotel is Romanian owned, but has a relationship with a travel company Untravelled Paths Limited, based in the United Kingdom.[23][24]

Sweden

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Icehotel Jukkasjärvi

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Main article:Icehotel (Jukkasjärvi)

Each year between December and April, theIcehotel in the village ofJukkasjärvi is open. It is about 17 km fromKiruna,Sweden, and it was the world's first ice hotel. 80 rooms and suites are available.[1] In addition to the entrance hall, the hotel has a chapel[1] and an ice bar named Absolut Icebar.[25] In 1989, Japanese ice artists visited the area and created an exhibition of ice art. In spring 1990, French artistJannot Derid held an exhibition in a cylinder-shapedigloo in the area. One night there were no rooms available in the town, so some of the visitors asked for permission to spend the night in the exhibition hall. They slept in sleeping bags on top ofreindeer skin.

The entire hotel is made out of snow and ice blocks taken from theTorne River;[25] even the glasses in the bar are made of ice. Each spring, around March, Icehotel harvests ice from the frozen river and stores it in a nearby production hall with room for over 100,000tons of ice and 30,000 tons of snow. Some of the blocks of ice weigh two tons, and cranes are used to place them.[25] The ice is used for creating Icebar designs and ice glasses, for ice sculpting classes, events and product launches all over the world while the snow is used for building a strong structure for the building. About 1,000 tons of what is left is used in the construction of the next Icehotel.

Each year, for the past 24 years now, the ice hotel has accepted applications from artists around the world to design the world-famous hotel's art suites. In 2013 there were more than 200 applications submitted from a wide range of artists to design and build an Art Suite. These included artists from a variety of creative backgrounds – including theatre and photography, to interior design and architecture. Around 15 applications are accepted with their designs and head there in November to build the suites.[26]

  • Icehotel
  • Main Hall "Secret Garden" at Icehotel in Jukkasjärvi, Sweden (January 2014)
    Main Hall "Secret Garden" at Icehotel in Jukkasjärvi, Sweden (January 2014)
  • A room at the Icehotel
    A room at the Icehotel

IGLOOTEL Lapland

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IGLOOTEL Entrance Area
Bar-IGLOO 2016

IGLOOTEL Lapland is located in Piteå, Sweden approx. 100 km south of the Arctic Circle. Every winter IGLOOTEL is being built and designed from scratch in cooperation with engineers and designers. IGLOOTEL consists of different IGLOOs, for example Sleeping-IGLOOs, Event-IGLOOs, an Ice-Bar and an Aurora Spa Area with a wood fired Outdoor Sauna and Hot Tubs. The IGLOOs are connected through hallways, which are also made of snow and ice. IGLOOTEL has an inner surface area of approx. 900 – 1.000 m2.[27]

Engravings in the snow and ice walls, illuminations and other art varies and creates a new, individual theme each year. Design students from an Art Academy develop the theme and create unique art work in each of the IGLOOs. Natural materials, for example local woods and reindeer skins are used to establish a comfortable atmosphere. The temperature inside IGLOOTEL is constantly between 0 °C (32 °F) and -4 °C (25 °F). The beds in IGLOOTEL Lapland are built on wooden platforms with mattresses and reindeer skins. Guests sleep in polar sleeping bags.[27][28]

Switzerland

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Theski resort in the village ofGstaad, Switzerland in theSwiss Alps has an igloo village where guests can rentigloos for overnight lodging.[29] In the igloos, sleeping areas are raised, and are "layered with foam, carpet and sheep skins", atop which sleeping bags are provided.[29] Lighting is provided by candles.[29]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefgAndrews (1 June 2007).Introduction To Tourism And Hospitality Industry. Tata McGraw-Hill Education. p. 105.ISBN 978-0-07-066021-2.
  2. ^abcdeDallen Timothy; Victor Teye (26 October 2009).Tourism and the Lodging Sector. Routledge. p. 240.ISBN 978-1-136-43398-6.
  3. ^abcdefMcLean, Jane."Staying at the Quebec Ice Hotel".About.com. Archived fromthe original on 13 July 2014. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  4. ^"Offbeat Traveler: 2012 Jukkasjarvi, Sweden Icehotel".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved26 October 2014.
  5. ^Magder, Jason."Everything you need to know about Quebec City's Ice Hotel".Canada.com (article written byMontreal Gazette).Postmedia Network. Archived fromthe original on 26 October 2014. Retrieved26 October 2014.
  6. ^"Hôtel de Glace". Icehotel-canada.com. 2013. Archived fromthe original on 29 January 2013.Located at only 10 minutes from downtown Québec City
  7. ^"Hôtel de Glace — Quebec City's Ice Hotel FAQ". Hôtel de Glace. Archived fromthe original on 12 July 2011.open from the first week in January to the last week in March.
  8. ^abcBaldwin, Letitia (30 January 2005)."Cold comfort".The Boston Globe. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  9. ^abcdefThe Canadian Press (27 January 2012)."Travel: Montreal's Snow Village includes 30-room ice hotel".Guelph Mercury. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  10. ^abcd"Pictures of the day: 4 February 2011".The Telegraph. 4 February 2011. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  11. ^abcdefO'Brien, Harriet (19 January 2007)."Ice Hotels: Cold comforts".The Independent. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  12. ^abcKoh, Yoree (17 January 2011)."Icy Hospitality: $900 for a Night at the 'Ice Hotel'".The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  13. ^Hatano, Yurie (February 2006)."Ice Village". Shift Japan. Archived fromthe original on 20 June 2007.
  14. ^Doman, Gaby (18 March 2011)."Awesome Oslo".Khaleej Times. Archived fromthe original on 21 October 2014. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  15. ^abFlores, Juan J. (20 January 2008)."Ice hotels: Have an ice stay".Orange County Register. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  16. ^abcdCahill, Louise (21 October 2014)."Travel: Kirkenes Snow Hotel, Arctic Norway".The Scotsman. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  17. ^"Snowhotel". Kirkenes Snowhotel. Archived fromthe original on 21 October 2014. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  18. ^abHenderson, Vicky (11 April 2014)."Heading north in search of fantastic lights display".The Northern Echo. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  19. ^abStorey, Vicky (30 March 2013)."Chilling out with trip to see Lights fantastic".Manchester Evening News. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  20. ^abBello, Grace (23 May 2013)."From igloo to castle, five exotic hotels".Today. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  21. ^(Staff) (3 October 2013)."Romania's ice hotel fully booked by Brits". Business Review. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  22. ^abc(Staff) (19 December 2013)."Have an ice time: a cool holiday experience at Balea Lake". Business Review. Archived fromthe original on 27 July 2014. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  23. ^"The Ice Hotel Experience". Untravelled Paths. Archived fromthe original on 19 October 2019. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  24. ^"Untravelled Paths (about)". Untravelled Paths. Retrieved21 October 2014.
  25. ^abcMoore, Robbie (2007)."Designing An Icehotel". Specifier Magazine. Archived fromthe original on 30 March 2008.
  26. ^"Icehotel Holidays". Discover-the-world.co.uk. Retrieved20 October 2014.
  27. ^ab"IGLOOTEL". Swedish Lapland Visitors Board. Retrieved8 October 2018.
  28. ^"IGLOOTEL Lapland". FlyCar Group. Retrieved8 October 2018.
  29. ^abcSteel, Patrick (2 April 2007)."Chilly reception".The Guardian. Retrieved21 October 2014.

Further reading

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External links

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