A Hotel That’s Also a Temporary Art Exhibition
Walking through ICEHOTEL is not like checking into a traditional hotel but more like stepping inside a gallery that just happens to be kept at -5°C. The main hall resembles an icy cathedral, with towering, frost-covered forms stretching toward the ceiling, while individual art suites transform snow and ice into immersive environments.
Guests can fall asleep surrounded by swirling “soap bubbles,” frozen libraries, abstract storm systems, or sculptural scenes inspired by black holes and Arctic folklore. Every room is different, and every piece is temporary — designed to exist for just one winter before returning to water.
The project is massive in scale. Ice is harvested in early spring, construction begins in November, and dozens of artists, builders, and designers work side by side to bring the hotel to life in just a few weeks.
What It’s Like to Spend the Night Inside ICEHOTEL
Staying overnight is very much part of the experience. Guests sleep on ice beds topped with thermal mattresses, reindeer hides, and very cozy sleeping bags. It’s cold, yes, but surprisingly comfortable, and the silence is unlike anything most visitors have experienced.
For those who want the art without the chill, the property also offers warm cabins and hotel rooms, plus a year-round ice section where suites stay frozen even in summer.
ICEHOTEL’s location north of the Arctic Circle adds another layer to the experience. Many visitors come hoping to see the Northern Lights, which have been particularly strong this winter, and the hotel offers snowmobiling, dog sledding, ice sculpting, sauna rituals, and wilderness dinners by open fire.