Outdoors & Rec

Chill! Breckenridge opens ice castle

Ice sits in the bottom of glasses, decorates parties in elaborate formations, makes snowy Colorado roads slick in the winter. It also forms glittery structures, one of which stands tall at Breckenridge Riverwalk Center, on West Adams Avenue. The ice castle opened on December 26 there -- just the third...
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Ice sits in the bottom of glasses, decorates parties in elaborate formations, makes snowy Colorado roads slick in the winter. It also forms glittery structures, one of which stands tall at Breckenridge Riverwalk Center, on West Adams Avenue. The ice castle opened on December 26 there — just the third location in the country where it can be viewed.

See also: Top five ways to survive negative temperatures and the onslaught of snow in Colorado

Ice Castles is a Utah company started by architect Brent Christensen. Each castle begins with formation of 5,000 icicles every day. Once an icicle is placed, it is drenched with freezing water — and this process is repeated every day for weeks until the castle is finished. The icicles are purposefully placed in order to form the castle; however, with changing temperatures and wind, Mother Nature plays a role in the final outcome of the structure.

The Breckenridge ice castle features giant ice towers, shiny archways, frozen thrones, shimmering walls and glossy tunnels; there is also a twenty-foot-long tunnel. Kids and families can crawl through this tunnel, which is designed to have a Narnia-like feel. The castles and tunnels will literally glow with the help of thousands of LED lights.

Will you step up to support Westword this year?

At Westword, we’re small and scrappy — and we make the most of every dollar from our supporters. Right now, we’re $20,000 away from reaching our December 31 goal of $50,000. If you’ve ever learned something new, stayed informed, or felt more connected because of Westword, now’s the time to give back.

$50,000

Visitors can view the castle from 2 to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday and noon to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday until March (end date not yet specified). Admission is $10, $8 for children four-eleven, and children three and under are free. For more details and tickets, to to the ice castle website.


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