illuminated ice sculptures at the Harbin Ice and Snow Festival in China

Life-sized famous landmarks are recreated in ice at the Harbin Ice and Snow Festival.

Photograph by Gavin Hellier, Alamy Stock Photo

Watch this ice city come alive with colorful lights

Brave the sub-zero temperatures at the Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival in China.

ByNational Geographic Staff
January 09, 2019
4 min read

Winters can be harsh in Heilongjiang, China’s most northeastern province, bordering Siberian Russia.

The residents of Harbin, Heilongjiang’s capital, brighten the long, frigid months by carving fantastical frozen sculptures for the International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival that takes place in January and February. [Discover incredible trips to take this winter.]

Once a mostly regional affair, the festival has grown to be a major international event and competition. So bundle up and pull on your sturdy boots to explore.

Pale winter sunlight sparkles on immense, life-size re-creations of famous landmarks around the world. Hard-packed snow crunches underfoot as you hike to the top of the Athens Acropolis or peer inside the gates of the Forbidden City.

Warm up with an exhilarating ride down a giant ice slide on the frozen Songhua River, then watch the island become an otherworldly land of shimmering ice and brilliant colors. As darkness falls, shades of crimson, sapphire, and lime green blaze forth from the translucent ice blocks.

“It’s quite surreal, due to both the scale and all the lighting—like being in a fantasy movie,” says Christian Stanley of the China Travel Company, which offers tours of Harbin and the festival.

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The Great WallStretching more than 5,000 miles, the Great Wall of China was built by first emperor, Qin, who began construction in the 3rd century B.C.
Photograph by Yimei Sun, Getty Images

“You feel very small and can’t help wondering how they manage to build all of this so quickly. It’s also hard to believe that within a matter of weeks it is all gone—melted away.”

Take a break from Harbin’s winter wonderland with a visit to the Siberian Tiger Park.

Located a few miles northwest of the city on the Songhua River, the park was established to help protect these magnificent animals, the largest felines in the world. Hundreds of purebred Siberian tigers—accustomed to the winter cold—freely roams the 355-acre nature reserve, along with lynx, leopards, and black puma. Visitors must ride in buses encircled by wire mesh, which the curious tigers will occasionally investigate.

This article, updated from a previous version, originally appeared in the National Geographic book Four Seasons of Travel. Buy the book here.

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