Icehotel (Jukkasjärvi)

ICE hotel

ICEHOTEL Main Hall (2014) by Alessandro Falca & AnnaSofia Mååg
General information
Location Jukkasjärvi, Sweden
Coordinates 67°50′59″N 20°35′40″E / 67.84972°N 20.59444°E / 67.84972; 20.59444Coordinates: 67°50′59″N 20°35′40″E / 67.84972°N 20.59444°E / 67.84972; 20.59444
Opening 1990
Technical details
Floor area 6,000 m2 (64,600 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect There is a different architect for every room
Other information
Number of rooms 55
Number of restaurants 10
Website
icehotel.com

The Icehotel (styled as ICEHOTEL) is a hotel built each year with snow and ice in the village of Jukkasjärvi, in northern Sweden, about 17 kilometres (11 mi) from Kiruna. It is the world's first ice hotel.[1]

After its first opening in 1990, the hotel has been built each year from December to April.[2] The hotel, including the chairs and beds, is constructed from snow and ice blocks taken from the nearby Torne River. Artists are invited to create different rooms and decorations made by ice. Besides bedrooms, there is a bar, with glasses made of ice and an ice chapel that is popular with marrying couples. The structure remains below freezing, around −5 °C (23 °F).[1]

History

Jukkasjärvi Icehotel interior. Sculptures by Jörgen Westin

In 1989, Japanese ice artists visited the area and created an exhibition of ice art. In Spring 1990, French artist Jannot Derid held an exhibition in a cylinder-shaped igloo in the same 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 igloo at the exhibition hall. They slept in the igloo in sleeping bags on top of reindeer skins, and were the first guests of the "hotel".

Hotel

The entire hotel is made out of snow and ice blocks from the Torne River, even the glasses in the bar are made of ice. Each spring, around March, Icehotel harvests tons of ice from the frozen Torne River and stores it in a nearby production hall with room for over 900 t (990 short tons) of ice and 27,000 t (30,000 short tons) of snow. The ice is used for creating Icebar designs and ice glasses, which are used 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 900 t (990 short tons) of what is left is used in the construction of the next Icehotel.

When completed, the hotel features a bar, church, main hall, reception area, plus about 100 rooms for guests.[3] The room rate starts at $1,500. The hotel hosts also an ice restaurant.[4] The furniture is sculpted blocks of ice in the form of chairs and beds. The thick walls, floor and ceiling are made of ice. Even the beds, the fittings and decoration are carved from ice. No two rooms are the same; the rooms are unique works of art. At the Icehotel the beds are bedded with reindeer furs and people are given special equipment to use while sleeping in the hotel. The guests sleep in polar-tested sleeping bags. There is no heating and the bedroom temperatures are constantly around −5 °C (23 °F). There’s no plumbing at the hotel, but there's a sauna that is run on the premises of the Icehotel with hot tub outdoors.[1]

The ice suites do not have any bathroom facilities but bathrooms for guests are found in a warm building close by. There is also warm accommodation available next to the hotel. The Icehotel in Jukkasjärvi is known to be the biggest hotel of ice and snow in the world, spanning over some 6,000 square metres (64,600 sq ft).[5] Each suite is unique and the architecture of the hotel is changed each year, as it is rebuilt from scratch. Each year, artists submit their ideas for suites, and a jury selects about 50 artists to create the church, Absolut Icebar, reception, main hall and suites. When spring comes, everything melts away and returns to the Torne River. The Icehotel only exists between December and April, and has been listed as one of the Seven Wonders of Sweden.[6] The northern hemisphere's aurora borealis can be seen during the winter month in the location.[2]

Documentaries that focus on this hotel can be seen from time to time on the Discovery Channel[7][8] and National Geographic.[9] The hotel appeared in a sketch about Sweden in one of the shows of the Eurovision Song Contest 2013, courtesy of Lynda Woodruff. The Icehotel has guests from many countries. There are many charter flights to the nearby Kiruna Airport, directly from London.[10]

Church

The local parish of Jukkasjärvi, part of the Swedish Church, runs the Ice Church. Following co-operation with the Icehotel, the Swedish Church operates the Ice Church as a regular church. Each year the church is consecrated at the Christmas Day service. During the winter period around 140 couples get married and about twenty children are baptized. Most of the baptized children live in the parish or have parents living there. The wedding co-ordinator can arrange for civil ceremonies to be carried out. Characteristics of a wedding in the Ice Chapel are the cold, the stillness and a cappella singing.[11] Reverend Jan-Erik Kuoksu from the Jukkasjärvi parish started the Ice Church. During his 17 years of service he has united 1,500 couples and baptized many children. Kuoksu worked alone as the priest in the Ice Church for the first fourteen years. His wife, Lisbeth, volunteers as a church usher.[12][13]

Icebars

Icehotel AB searched for business partners during the early and mid-1990s, and the founder, Yngve Bergqvist, decided upon Absolut Vodka as the first sponsor. The first Absolut Icebar opened in Icehotel in 1994, and today the concept is used in three cities: London, Stockholm and Jukkasjärvi.

Several high-profile events around the Icehotel have since been initiated by Absolut Vodka. In 1994, the extension was an advertising shoot for Absolut Vodka to Jukkasjärvi, with photographer Herb Ritts. Models Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Mark Findlay and Marcus Schenkenberg were photographed surrounded by ice, wearing creations designed by fashion designer Gianni Versace.

Guests are served vodka in glasses made of ice from the Torne River, often described as a drink "in the rocks". Ice glasses at the bars are brought from the production hall in Jukkasjärvi to the Icehotel. This is also the case with the interior creations, because every six months they are replaced on site by staff from the ice production and artists. This is done to ensure quality and safety.

Icebar by Icehotel is a franchise concept for ice bar. The concept was launched in spring 2009, with the opening of the Ice Bar CPH by Icehotel in Copenhagen, Denmark. The bar was followed in June of that year by the Ice Bar Tokyo by Icehotel in Tokyo, Japan, and shortly after, the Icebar Oslo by Icehotel in Oslo, Norway.

The suite "Coming out" 2008 by Maurizio Perron

Life cycle

Each year the ICEHOTEL receives applications from artists around the world to design the imaginative suites. In 2013 over 200 requests were submitted by different artists with different qualifications – including theatre, structural design, camerawork and interior design. The artists will start the work in Jukkasjarvi starting each year in November to build the suites. When the temperature drops and the snow guns start humming on the Torne River shore, usually in mid-November, the building process begins. The snow is sprayed on huge inverted catenary shaped steel forms and allowed to freeze. After a couple of days, the forms are removed, leaving a maze of free-standing corridors of snow. In the corridors, dividing walls are built in order to create rooms and suites. Ice blocks are then transported into the hotel, where selected artists start creating the art and design of the perishable material. The Icehotel in Jukkasjärvi opens in phases. The first phase opens in the beginning of December. For each week, another section of the hotel opens up for visitors and guests until the beginning of January. At this time, the entire construction is completed.[14]

Icehotel in the media

References

  1. 1 2 3 An ice place to visit ...; ... But you may not want to stay more than..., Los Angeles Times, Feb 9, 2003
  2. 1 2 The Complete Guide To The Northern Lights, The Independent, August 21, 2004.
  3. "Staying cool: Sweden's Icehotel". good.is. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  4. "the-seven-wonders-of-sweden". Retrieved 2014-04-09.
  5. Jorge de souza, Viagem e Turismo, pg. 78, Editora Abril (1999), ISSN 0104-978X (Portuguese)
  6. "What are the Seven Wonders of Sweden?", About.com, retrieved October 16, 2008.
  7. "The Ice Hotel", The Internet Movie Database, retrieved September 6, 2008.
  8. "Mega Builders: Ice hotel", The Internet Movie Database, retrieved September 6, 2008.
  9. "Megastructures: Ice hotel", The Internet Movie Database, retrieved September 6, 2008.
  10. "Holidays to Sweden - Sweden Holidays - Discover the World".
  11. "Kiruna Kyrkokör". Jukkasjärvi Församling. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  12. "Sista Vigseln Iskyrkans Skapare". Svenska Kyrkan. Retrieved 2014-04-09.
  13. "18:e Ice Hotel och Ice Church i Jukkasjärvi – coolt!". metromannen7. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  14. "Sweden Icehotel". discover-the-world.
  15. "The Ice Hotel (TV Movie 2004)". IMDb. 5 December 2004.
  16. "Ice Hotel". National Geographic Channel.
  17. Lynda Woodruff in Jukkasjärvi - Eurovision 2013 1st Semifinal. 15 May 2013 via YouTube.
  18. http://www.contedisanpietro.com/website-af-master/03-news-and-events-ENG/story14/03-page-news-story-14-01.html
  19. ""Björnen i Jukkasjärvi" på festival i Prag - Bodesand Produktion". Bodesand Produktion.
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