The 8th Ice and Snow
World opened to visitors in Harbin, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, on January 5
and continues until February 25. More than 2000 ice sculptures are on display at the
annual event.
The Harbin Ice
Festival, established in 1985, is held annually from January 5 and lasts for over one
month. This is China's greatest ice artwork festival and attracts hundreds of thousands of
local and overseas visitors.
The city's location in
northeast China accounts for its arctic climate which provides abundant ice and snow. The
'Ice City' of Harbin is recognized as home to ice and snow art in China and is famous for
its exquisite sculptures.
The fabulous Ice
Lantern Festival was the forerunner of the current event and is still perhaps the best
loved part of the festival in the opinion of those who come to Harbin annually.


Travel Info:
Harbin Ice and Snow World:
Admission Fee: 150
yuan for adults and 75 yuan for kids. Opening hours: 9:00-22:00 Bus Route: 29, 88,
118, 80, 85
Website: http://www.hrbicesnow.com/8th/en/index.asp
Sun Island Park
Admission Fee: 30 yuan
for adults and 15 yuan for kids (extra 50 yuan for the Snow Sculpture Art Exposition).
Opening hours: 8:00-17:00
Bus Route: 101,102,103
Zhaolin Park:
Admission Fee: 30 yuan
at the time of the Ice Lantern Exhibition and 10 yuan normally. Opening hours: 5:00-18:30
Bus Route: 101,103
Travel Tips:
The lowest temperature
in Harbin's February is at -30 to -20 degrees Celsius, and nowaday digital
camera can not work well there in such a cold weather. Be careful of your camera as well
as yourself.
Harbin is some 1250 km
far from Beijing. Direct train, Z15 with soft sleeper service, is availabel at
Beijing railway station, departing at 20:30 and arriving at 07:05 everyday. The price is
429 yuan. Besides, T71(08:30-20:29) and T47 (17:30-05:05) are slao optional trips.
The Derivation
of the Ice Lantern
The first ice lanterns
were a winter-time tradition in northeast China. During the Qing Dynasty (1644 - 1911)
local peasants and fishermen often made and used ice lanterns as jack-lights during the
winter months.
At that time these
were made simply by pouring water into a bucket that was put outside to freeze. It was
then gently warmed before the water froze completely so that the bucket-shaped ice could
be pulled out. A hole was made in the top and the water remaining inside poured out
creating a hollow vessel. A candle was then placed inside resulting in a windproof lantern
that gained great popularity in the Harbin region.
From then on people
made ice lanterns and put them outside their houses or gave them to children to play with
during some of the traditional festivals. So the ice lantern began its long history of
development. With changes and great advancement in techniques today one can marvel at the
various delicate and artistic lanterns on display.
Today's Ice
Lantern
Today ice lanterns in
the broad sense refer to plastic, ice and snow as raw materials which combine ice art with
colored lights and music. The patterns on ice lanterns include ice and snow sculptures,
flowers, architecture and much more.
Harbin Ice Festival
annually provides visitors with a whole new world of ice and snow. The most admired ice
artworks are exhibited in three main areas: the Sun Island Park, Harbin Ice and Snow World
and Zhaolin Park.
The Sun Island Park is
home to the Snow Sculpture Exposition which displays a wonderful world of snow. It has the
world's largest indoor ice and snow art museum and it opens to the public from November
every year.
Harbin Ice and Snow
World came into being in 1999 and is one of the world's largest ice architecture parks.
The inspiration for the ice and snow sculptures is usually derived from traditional
Chinese fairy tales or world famous structures such as the Great Wall and the Egyptian
Pyramids.
Zhaolin Park is a 'must see' during the Harbin Ice
Festival as it has a traditional program that shows the best ice lanterns. With water,
lights and natural ice from the Songhua River as the materials used the ice lanterns are
made by freezing water, piling up ice or snow and then carving and decorating them.
The ice lantern park
touring activities have been held here annually since 1963 and is said to be one of the
top 35 tourist attractions of China. There are numerous pieces of ice artwork in the park
arranged in groups according to different themes depicting Chinese classic masterworks,
European folk tales and customs.
A great variety of
objects such as buildings, gardens, flowers, waterfalls, European-styled churches, lions,
tigers and dragons are carved from ice. In the daytime the ice sculptures are simply
magnificent. And with the sparkling colored lights embedded in the sculptures coming on at
night the park becomes a colorful and amazing world of ice.
Harbin Ice Festival is
not just an exposition of ice and snow art but also an annual cultural event for
international exchange.
Every year there are
ice sculpture experts, artists and fans from America, Canada, Japan, Singapore, Russia
China and many other countries. They participate in ice sculpting competitions and
communicate with each other in the ice and snow world.
Harbin ice lanterns have been exhibited in most of China's main cities as well as
in many countries in Asia, Europe, North America, Africa and Oceania. For more than 40
years Harbin's ice and snow has been fully exploited to provide joy and fun for visitors
to the city.
During the festival
many sporting competitions are also popular including ice-skating, sledding and the like.
Weddings, parties and other entertainments are now very much a feature of this ice world.
They make their own contribution to this great festival of art, culture, sports and
tourism.