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Why do people stay in ice hotels?

The visual stimulation you get inside the hotel is incredible, but the snow and ice also create experiences for other senses, too. Snow and ice absorb sound, so when in you're in your room at night, wrapped in the sleeping bag, you will experience absolute silence like none other.



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It is an experience for life to spend a night in a cold room here! I would recommend it to all my friends. The tour of the hotel to watch all the beautiful ice sculptures is great. Be prepared that you will keep your clothes in a locker while you accomodate the cold room.

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Day visitors and guests have access to see all the rooms, except reserved Deluxe Suites. This means overnight guests get their rooms at 6 pm. Check-in and out for warm rooms is at 3 pm and 11 am. All rooms in Icehotel Winter have curtain doors, while the Art and Deluxe Suites in Icehotel 365 all have doors.

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Ice hotels are only available at certain months in the year, which might not be convenient for those with a hectic schedule. The interiors of the hotels are also rather chilly, so you definitely need to enjoy cold temperatures and not be looking to cosy up or go sunbathing!

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The ice room has a classic design and holds a temperature of -5 to -8 degrees Celsius. The bed you sleep on has a thick mattress that rests on a wooden base. The bed is covered with reindeer hides and you sleep in a thermal sleeping bag.

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There are no bathrooms (except the Deluxe Suites) or storage in the Ice rooms or Art suites. These facilities are housed in a heated service building, where you also keep your belongings during the night. The service desk is staffed 24 hours.

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The ice structure stops heat being transferred to the surroundings, because the ice and the windless air are both excellent insulators. The buildings depend on sub-freezing temperatures and usually melt in summer, rebuilt again from fresh ice every year.

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Hotel ice is generally considered safe to consume, as long as it is made from clean, treated water and handled properly. Let's hope so. Generally speaking, ice machines make ice in a sanitary way. No human hands come in contact with the ice while it is being made, so there's no chance of cross contamination.

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3. Icehotel | Jukkasjarvi, Sweden. Of all of the ice hotels around the world, perhaps the most well-known is Sweden's Icehotel. Dubbed the world's first and largest hotel built of snow and ice, Icehotel has been welcoming visitors for over 30 years.

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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). Each suite is unique and the architecture of the hotel is changed each year, as it is rebuilt from scratch.

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Every couple days, the floor of each room receives a new coat of fluffy snow, which is piped through the vent and leveled with a garden rake. “It's the equivalent of vacuuming the carpet,” McClean says.

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Generally glassware and mugs and other dishes from rooms are taken away and run through a sanitizing dishwasher. But that doesn't happen with ice buckets. They are usually just wiped down and put back on the tray along with whatever germs and bacteria are lurking in or on them.

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There isn't any running water in ice hotel rooms, but there are always nearby bathrooms with flush toilets should nature call in the middle of the night. But don't expect an all-ice hotel to have indoor plumbing.

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The skeleton of the hotel is made of steel and concrete and is covered with 2,000 square metres of insulation. The roof has 20-centimetre insulation to protect the ice from melting in summers. The suites of Ice Hotel 365 have art-exhibition during day time and they make a hotel at night time.

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Icehotel Winter has been reincarnated in a new rendition every winter for the last three decades, every year with brand new art to experience. During an intense period in Jukkasjärvi during November and early December every year, the empty space on the riverbank turns into a magnificent hotel made of ice and snow.

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