Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Cool Castle: Thousands Of Icicles Create Frozen Fortress In Edmonton

The Canadian Press, 31 Dec, 2015 12:12 PM
    EDMONTON — Ryan Davis was working as a real estate developer five years ago when he started building palaces that melted away each spring.
     
    It's now his full-time job to build them back up every winter, using hundreds of thousands of shimmering icicles.
     
    "We don't go bigger than this," Davis said Wednesday, a few hours before his Utah-based Ice Castles company opened its first Canadian castle in Edmonton.
     
    About nine million kilograms of ice stretches into tall towers and tunnels covering nearly a hectare in William Hawrelak Park.
     
    More than 20 workers started creating the cool curiosity at the end of November.
     
    Davis said they grew at least 10,000 icicles per day on racks using sprinklers, with hoses running 23 million litres of water from a fire hydrant. The chunks were then placed by hand on top of each other and fused in place with more sprinklers.
     
    "We spray them with water and, when you spray an icicle with water, it gets thicker and thicker, and we do that over and over and over and over again," he said.
     
    Amid the archways, there's also a fountain, a waterfall, a fireplace, a throne room and two slides. LED lights buried in the ice illuminate the castle in different colours at night.
     
    The castle is set to stay open until March, weather permitting. Admission prices range from $10 to $20, with some proceeds going to global charities and to Edmonton's Silver Skate Festival.
     
    Festival producer Erin DiLoreto says she spent three years trying to get Ice Castles north of the border. This season, the company has also made castles in Utah, Minnesota and New Hampshire.
     
    "It's magical," DiLoreto said, as she surveyed the Edmonton construction.
     
    "I think it's something for everyone... For little girls, it's Elsa's 'Frozen.' For little boys, it's Superman's Fortress of Solitude."
     
    She hopes Edmonton gets another one next year.
     
    Davis said he's looking at a couple of other sites in Canada, but no decision has been made yet.
     
    "We're the only people in the world who build this way," said the project's lead artisan, Cory Livingood, his breath forming small ice crystals in his beard.
     
    Livingood studied art, engineering and business and, after moving from Alaska to Colorado, found his calling, he said.
     
    The Edmonton castle is his fifth.
     
    "Every year I get to teach a new group of people how to build an ice castle ... It's actually a lot of fun."
     
    The structure will change and grow even more over the next few months, Livingood added.
     
    "Since I have the entire winter and cold temperatures, I like to continue playing. So we will continue to change the castle as much as we can."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Latest Plane Load Of Syrians Arrives But How Many More Flights Unclear

    Latest Plane Load Of Syrians Arrives But How Many More Flights Unclear
    OTTAWA — The latest group of Syrians being brought to Canada on a government-sponsored flight have arrived in Toronto.

    Latest Plane Load Of Syrians Arrives But How Many More Flights Unclear

    B.C. Commission Confirms 4.6-Magnitude Quake In August Caused By Fracking

    FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. — The British Columbia Oil and Gas Commission has confirmed that fracking caused a 4.6-magnitude earthquake in August — the largest linked to the industry in the province to date.

    B.C. Commission Confirms 4.6-Magnitude Quake In August Caused By Fracking

    Blue Jays, Federal Election Top Google Canada Searches In 2015

    Blue Jays, Federal Election Top Google Canada Searches In 2015
    TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays and the federal election that saw Justin Trudeau become prime minister were the top Canadian subjects of Google searches in 2015.

    Blue Jays, Federal Election Top Google Canada Searches In 2015

    Kamloops Region Roused By 3.6-Magnitude Quake That Felt Like A 'Jackhammer'

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A small earthquake was lightly felt by residents in south central British Columbia overnight.

    Kamloops Region Roused By 3.6-Magnitude Quake That Felt Like A 'Jackhammer'

    Refugee Arrivals Set To Ramp Up To Average Two Planes A Day: John McCallum

    OTTAWA — The next planeload of Syrian refugees is set to arrive on Friday and the pace is then expected to pick up to an average of two planes a day between now and the end of the year.

    Refugee Arrivals Set To Ramp Up To Average Two Planes A Day: John McCallum

    Half of Canadian Parents Willing To Postpone Retirement To Help Out Their Children

    Half of Canadian Parents Willing To Postpone Retirement To Help Out Their Children
    Half of Canadian parents say they would postpone retirement because of concerns about the financial future of their children.

    Half of Canadian Parents Willing To Postpone Retirement To Help Out Their Children