It’s a little winter wonderland.
The Swedish Ice Hotel for 2022/2023 is officially open. The hotel, filled with amazing ice sculptures, has been built and reconstructed every year since 1989 in the village of Jukkasjarvi, 200 kilometers north of the Arctic Circle along the banks of the Torne River.
In building this year’s Icehotel, the 33rd overall, 24 artists from around the world spent weeks painstakingly creating 12 unique suites plus one luxury suite at Icehotel 365, the annual version.
A glittering dome, video game-inspired sculptures and giant mushrooms are among the beautiful ice creations carved on site.
The Swedish Ice Hotel for 2022/2023 has officially opened in the village of Jukkasjarvi, 200 kilometers north of the Arctic Circle

24 artists from all over the world painstakingly created 12 unique suites for the Icehotel 33 for weeks. Above is The Mushroom suite.

Pictured is the ‘Enclosed Space’ suite ‘where one can enjoy the protection of an igloo within another igloo’

Enter the “High Score” suite, an area themed around video game marathons, and you’ll find a “games room to indulge nostalgia for a simpler era.”
In addition, there is a new design for the hotel’s ceremonial room for “intimate parties”, complete with a “stylized flower” at the heart, designed by Wouter Biegelaar and Viktor Tsarski.
The construction process began in the spring when blocks of ice were harvested from the Torne River and stored in an ice storage facility in Jukkasjarvi.
Later, when construction began, the artists sculpted their creations from a whopping 500 tons of ice and 10 Olympic-sized pools of “Snice” – a mixture of snow and ice. The hotel’s construction team and creative director Luca Roncoroni helped with the build.

There’s a new ceremony room design for “Intimate Celebrations,” complete with a “stylized flower” in the heart (above).

Natsuki Saito and Shingo Saito’s “Garden” suite is decorated with a large floral pattern

The artists modeled their creations using no less than 500 tonnes of ice and 10 Olympic-sized swimming pools made of “Snice” – a mixture of snow and ice. The Home Nature suite is shown.

The hotel’s construction team and creative director Luca Roncoroni helped with the build. The “What Is To Come” suite is located on the top floor.

The Celtic legend of the half-woman, half-seal Selkie inspired the ice sculptures in the Maighdeann roin suite.

According to the designers, “Secrets and messages are hidden everywhere” in the “Maighdeann-roin” suite.
Temperatures at the hotel are kept to minus five degrees Celsius (23 Fahrenheit) to keep the sparkling suites in tip-top condition.
The Ice Dome is located in the Enclosed Space Suite, “where you can enjoy the protection of an igloo inside another igloo,” according to designers Rob Harding and Timsam Harding.
Meanwhile, Natsuki Saito and Shingo Saito’s “Garden” suite is decorated with a large floral pattern.

Above is the “Bauh-ice” suite, a room inspired by the Bauhaus design movement of the 1920s and 1930s

The “Bauh Eis” suite invites guests to “travel back in time and experience geometric shapes, rounded furniture, lines and stripes”.

The Mushroom suite aims to create a mushroom-filled forest that resembles a “jungle of Jurassic proportions”.

The “Garden” suite. The winter hotel is open until April 2023
Inspired by the Bauhaus design movement of the 1920s and 1930s, Luc Voisin and Mathieu Brison’s “Bauh-ice” suite invites guests to “travel back in time and experience geometric shapes, rounded furniture, lines and stripes”.
Enter the “High Score” suite, an area themed around video game marathons, and you’ll find a “games room to indulge nostalgia for a simpler era.” Sonia Chow and Huschang Pourian were the brains behind this space.
The Celtic legend of the half-woman, half-seal “Selkie” inspired the ice sculptures in the “Maighdeann-roin” suite, designed by Emilie Steele and Sara Steele. “Secrets and messages are hidden everywhere, in a mix of snow sculptures, glistening ice, music and a bittersweet story that unfolds the moment you step inside,” say the designers.

The photo shows Wouter Biegelaar and Viktor Tsarski, who designed the ballroom

Sonia Chow and Huschang Pourian brought their love of video games to the High Score suite

The Enclosed Space suite is the work of artists Rob Harding and Timsam (above)

Emilie Steele and Sara Steele (above) devised the eye-catching “Maighdeann-roin” suite

Edmund Chan and TaiTien Tan, pictured, teamed up to create the Dreams of Pencils suite

Chris Pancoe and Peter Hargraves are the brains behind The Mushroom suite

Pictured is Lukas Petko, the designer of the beautiful Hidden Milan suite

The artists pictured, Ilka Raupach and Line Jastram, created the “What is to Come” suite.
A STORM OF FACTS ABOUT THE ICEHOTEL 2023
- 24 artists (from 13 countries) designed the new art suites in Icehotel 33
- 500 tons of ice were used to build Ice Hotel 33
- Ten Olympic-sized swimming pools made of ice, a mixture of snow and ice, were used to build the hotel
- Two hundred handmade ice crystals were used to create a crystal chandelier
- The temperature inside the Icehotel 33 is minus five degrees Celsius
- Icehotel 33 took six weeks to build from start to finish
- About 60 to 70 people worked on the project
- 102 artists submitted entries to be part of building this year’s edition of Icehotel
Chris Pancoe and Peter Hargraves are the minds behind The Mushroom suite, which looks like an ice-carved, mushroom-filled forest “of Jurassic proportions.”
Once guests have explored their unique accommodations, the hotel’s offerings include private snowmobile rides, ice fishing, dog sledding, horseback riding, and Northern Lights excursions.
Luca Roncoroni, creative director of Icehotel, says: “Every year I am amazed at what this incredible team can achieve; Talented international artists together with a team of ice professionals can truly create magic. Welcome to Ice Hotel 33!’

Activities offered by the hotel include private snowmobile rides, dog sled rides and Northern Lights excursions
Source link

James is an author and travel journalist who writes for The Fashion Vibes. With a love for exploring new cultures and discovering unique destinations, James brings his readers on a journey with him through his articles.