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http://dawn.com/2012/12/15/swedens-ice-hotel-a-work-of-art-for-the-here-and-now/

Safar 5, 1434
Wednesday 19th December 2012 

| 

Sweden’s ice hotel, a work of art for the here-and-now
AFP | 15th December, 2012 


 
People work at the construction site of the new Ice Hotel in the village of 
Jukkasjarvi, near Kiruna, in Swedish Lapland on Nov 16, 2012. The Ice Hotel 
gets a new design and is reconstructed every year, and is dependent upon 
constant sub-freezing temperatures during construction and operation. – AFP 
Photo

JUKKASJAERVI: In a small Arctic town in Sweden, a construction crew bundled up 
in heavy parkas is bustling around a building site unlike any other: a massive 
ice hotel is taking shape.

Armed with thick gloves and safety helmets over fur-lined hats, the builders in 
the northern town of Jukkasjaervi assemble two-tonne blocks of ice as if they 
were a large set of Lego blocks, with the end result a giant igloo with several 
domes, vaulted ceilings and archways.

In one hallway, a worker uses a large pick to carve a door out of the 
blue-tinged packed snow, working up a sweat despite the sub-zero temperatures 
as he exhales feathery puffs of breath.

The builders had just a few weeks to sculpt 65 hotel rooms, a lobby and 
reception area, a main hall and an ice bar in a race against the clock ahead of 
the opening earlier this month.

An ice chapel will be added to host weddings and christenings, complete with an 
ice-sculpted altar, font and pews.

And yet all this effort is ephemeral: in a few months the entire structure will 
melt away with the spring thaw.

“We’re completely dependent on the weather, we have a schedule to adhere to but 
it varies from year to year,” Icehotel representative Beatrice Karlsson said.

The construction method is unique to the Icehotel, according to Nordic 
architecture expert Rasmus Waern. “It’s totally original. There’s no tradition 
in Scandinavia of building with ice,” he said.

But it is rapidly becoming a tradition: the Icehotel is being staged for the 
23rd time this year on the shores of the Torne River from where the ice is 
taken.

“In March, 5,000 tonnes of ice are pulled from the river and then conserved in 
two-tonne blocks in two warehouses where the temperature is maintained at 
between minus eight and minus five degrees Celsius (between 17.6 and 23 
Fahrenheit),” explains Jens Thoms Ivarsson, in charge of the hotel’s interior 
design.

Construction typically begins in the autumn, when the first polar chills 
descend on Sweden’s far north.

But five months later, once spring arrives and with it the long-awaited sun, 
the entire site melts down.

“We return to the Torne what we borrowed,” says Thoms Ivarsson, grateful for 
the river’s loan without which the Icehotel could not exist.

Once the building process is completed, the interior still needs to be 
decorated: ornate chandeliers will embellish the main hall, while avant-garde 
sculptures, bas reliefs, and chairs and beds all cut out of ice await.

Each of the 16 suites is considered a unique piece of art, designed by artists 
selected from more than 100 applicants from all corners of the globe.

While management refuses to disclose how much the entire endeavour costs each 
year, the hotel’s interior design alone has a budget of five million kronor 
(580,000 euros, $752,000).

Ambitious sculptures in the past have included a pinball machine with coloured 
lights inside the ice, a man sitting on a toilet in a bathroom, a female 
Buddha, a rocket ship, and the inside of a refrigerator.

The hotel also has 49 standard rooms with less elaborate decor, some of which 
will feature scenes of northern lights, a spectacular phenomenon also known as 
aurora borealis in which streams of coloured lights streak across the night 
sky, a show some visitors will be lucky enough to see during their stay.

As in the suites, all of the regular room beds are made of ice blocks covered 
with reindeer skins. Visitors spending the night are given thermal sleeping 
bags when they check in – and a diploma when they check out to prove they 
survived a night at minus seven degrees Celsius (19 degrees Fahrenheit).

The hotel – copies of which are now erected in several other countries – has no 
stars the way other hotels do.

But that doesn’t mean it’s for budget travellers: the cost of a room ranges 
from 2,200 to 7,000 kronor (between 255 and 810 euros) per night.

Alternately, tourists can pay 325 kronor a head to tour the hotel, which also 
makes money off the weddings and christenings it hosts, as well as the popular 
ice bar where drinks are served in glasses made of ice


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