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Sapporo Snow Festival

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Annual festival in Hokkaido, Japan
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Sapporo Snow Festival
Central Sapporo, 2007
GenreSnow Festival
DatesFebruary
LocationsSapporo, Japan
Years active1950–present
WebsiteSapporo Snow Festival

TheSapporo Snow Festival (さっぽろ雪まつり,Sapporo Yuki-matsuri) is a festival held annually inSapporo, Japan, over seven days in February.Odori Park,Susukino, andTsudome are the main sites of the festival.

In 2007 (57th festival), about two million people visited Sapporo to see the hundreds of snow statues and ice sculptures at the Odori Park and Susukino sites, in central Sapporo, and at the Satoland site.[1] An International Snow Sculpture Contest has been held at the Odori Park site since 1974, and 14 teams from various regions of the world participated in 2008.[2]

The subject of the statues varies and often features an event, famous building or person from the previous year. For example, in 2004, there were statues ofHideki Matsui, the famousbaseball player who at that time played for theNew York Yankees. A number of stages made out of snow are also constructed and some events including musical performances are held. At the Satoland site, visitors can enjoy the long snow and ice slides as well as a huge maze made of snow. Visitors can also enjoy a variety of regional foods from all overHokkaidō at the Odori Park and Satoland sites, such as fresh seafood, potatoes, corn, and fresh dairy products.[citation needed]

Every year the number of statues displayed is around 400 in total.[citation needed] In 2007, there were 307 statues created at theOdori Park site, 32 at the Satoland site and 100 at the Susukino site. A good view of the creations can be had from the TV Tower at the Odori Park site.[1]

History

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The Snow Festival began as a one-day event in 1950, when six local high school students built six snow statues in Odori Park. In 1955 theJapan Self-Defense Forces from the nearby Makomanai base joined in and built the first massivesnow sculptures, for which the Snow Festival has now become famous. Several snow festivals existed in Sapporo prior to the Sapporo Snow Festival, however, all of these were suspended duringWorld War II.[3]

On 4 February 1966, a flight from Sapporo to Tokyocrashed into Tokyo Bay killing all 126 passengers and 7 crew on board. Many of the passengers were returning to Tokyo after visiting the snow festival.

Owing to theEnergy crisis of 1974, snow statues were built usingdrums. This was due to the shortage of gasoline caused by the crisis and unavailability oftrucks used to transport snow to the site. In the same year, the International Snow Statue Competition started and since that year many snow statues built by teams from other countries have featured; especially fromsister cities of Sapporo such asMunich.[citation needed]

In years when the accumulated snowfall is low, the Self-Defense Force, for whom participation is considered a training exercise, brings in snow from outside Sapporo. The Makomanai base, one of three main sites from 1965,[4] hosted the largest sculptures, with an emphasis on providing play space for children. Use of the Makomanai site was suspended in 2005 and moved to theSapporo Satoland site located inHigashi-ku from 2006. In 2009, the Satoland site was moved to the Tsudome (つどーむ,Tsudōmu;Sapporo Community Dome) site. The Tsudome, located close to the Sapporo Satoland, is a dome for multiple sports events.[citation needed]

Nakajima Park was established as one of the festival sites in 1990. However, it was removed as a site in 1992.[3] The third site, known as the Susukino Ice Festival (すすきの氷の祭典,Susukino Kōri no Saiten), is situated in the night-life district ofSusukino and includes predominantly ice carvings. The site was approved as one of the festival sites in 1983.[4] Every year, the Susukino Queen of Ice, a femalebeauty contest, is held at the site.[5]

On 7 February 2012 (63rd Festival), a snow sculpture of Snow Miku (Hatsune Miku) collapsed on the Odori Park 6th Venue, where a female tourist was injured. This accident was the first injury in the history of the Snow Festival from the collapse of a snow sculpture. The collapse was likely due to imbalance caused by disproportionately thin supporting legs to the main mass of the sculpture. Additionally, the temperature on February 6 was 3.3 degrees Celsius, and the temperature on 7th was 2.2 degrees Celsius, likely causing it to become brittle and more prone to collapse. In response to this, the executive committee demolished all or part of the heavy snow sculptures and ten civilian snow sculptures as there was a risk of collapse.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abThe outline of the Sapporo Snow FestivalArchived 13 October 2007 at theWayback Machine
  2. ^International Snow Sculpture Contest, English pageArchived 13 May 2008 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^abSapporo Board of Education. "Sapporo Bunko No.47" Hokkaidō News Bureau, 1998.
  4. ^ab"History of the Sapporo Snow Festival". Archived fromthe original on 21 December 2001. Retrieved2 December 2007.
  5. ^Sommerlad, Joe (4 February 2019)."Sapporo Snow Festival 2019: What is the annual ice sculpture extravaganza in Japan?".The Independent. Retrieved9 December 2019.
  6. ^"Falling snow sculpture injures woman at Sapporo Snow Festival".Japan Today. 8 February 2012. Retrieved12 January 2022.

External links

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