About the Hôtel de Glace (ice hotel)
HISTORY
1996: Jacques Desbois, an entrepreneur passionate about winter, comes across a magazine article featuring the Icehotel in Sweden. It’s love at first sight! “If the Swedes can do it, we can definitely make it happen here in Quebec, the snow capital!” he exclaimed.
After a trip to Sweden to study and understand the Icehotel’s construction techniques, Jacques Desbois and his partners adapted this innovative recreational tourism concept to the Quebec context. It took them four years of imagination and ingenuity to create a truly unique product.
2001: In 2001, Quebec, Canada, and all of North America discovered this incredible tourist attraction, now recognized around the world.
2011: Built for the first time at Montmorency Falls, the Hôtel de Glace was then constructed at Station touristique Duchesnay for nine years before moving to the site of the former Quebec City Zoo in 2011.
2016: The Hôtel de Glace (ice hotel) finally found its permanent home, becoming one of the crown jewels of Village Vacances Valcartier’s winter offerings. Truly one of a kind, the Hôtel de Glace has over the years become one of the most iconic postcards of the Quebec and Canadian winter. Fully embracing its role as a major tourism draw for the region and the province, the Hôtel de Glace welcomes thousands of visitors every year.
THEME
The Hôtel de Glace (ice hotel) is celebrating its 26th winter and its 10th construction at Village Vacances Valcartier. Since the Hôtel de Glace melts, a new one is built every year. In fact, each winter, a brand-new Hôtel de Glace is erected, a new architectural plan is designed, and a new theme inspires the décor.
This year, the Hôtel de Glace comes to life. It beats, it breathes, it tells a story. Before your eyes, the sculpted walls awaken and the lights dance across the frosted crystals...
ACHIEVEMENT
Construction of the Hôtel de Glace can begin as early as November, once temperatures remain below zero for a week. Each year, around fifty people work on building the hotel over a period of approximately six weeks. About thirty workers handle production, while around fifteen sculptors focus on furnishing and decorating this magnificent work of art. Whether part of the snow team, ice team, machinery crew, or artists, everyone works intensively on-site day and night until mid-January.