Kemi SnowCastle
Castle and surrounding structures built anew every winterLess than 100 miles below the Arctic Circle in Finnish Lapland, beauty is fleeting. Each year, the massive SnowCastle in Kemi is reconstructed in January, only to melt into muddy sludge in the spring sunlight.
The castle was first created in 1996 as a gift from UNICEF, and the tradition has been going strong in the community ever since. In total, it takes over five weeks to build the castle complex, due in large part to the amount of structures that comprise it. Although Finland gets its fair share of snow, builders actually use seawater-converting snow machines to create the powerful material for their snowy medieval fortifications.
Along with the castle walls, which are over twelve feet high, the area also features a hotel, art gallery, and chapel, where some people even come from across the globe to get married. Each portion of the castle is lit with colorful light that adds splendor to the naturally illuminated ice walls. Many artists come to lend their talents to the castle by creating ice sculptures throughout the waterside structure as well.
Situated right on the Bothnian Bay, the castle rises up like a majestic fairytale world in the cold Finnish winter. In many ways, the SnowCastle makes the long, dark northern winters a bit more bearable for the small town of Kemi.
Although the main components of the castle are consistent each winter, the SnowCastle melts in the spring and is constantly built in a new configuration. During the last 15 years, the castle has been anywhere from 13,000-20,000 square meters and has even reached three stories high. Every year is a wonderful and chilly surprise for visitors, even those who have come in the past.
Whether visitors come for an icy wedding reception or a stay in a below-freezing honeymoon suite, the snowcastle is fantasy experience that could bring out the inner child in the most cynical of travelers. Just make sure and see it before it melts..
Read more about Kemi SnowCastle on Atlas Obscura...
Category: Commercial Curiosities, Odd Accommodations, Bizarre Restaurants and Bars, Architectural Oddities, Outsider Architecture
Location: Kemi, Finland
Edited by: atimian, Nicholas Jackson, martofkukuf, Lescrosnez, Dylan, Rachel