Sleep in an igloo village or luxury pod at these ski resorts

Newsroom Featured Ski Destinations Sleep in an igloo village or luxury pod at these ski resorts

Want to get closer to nature on your ski holiday? Well, you can sleep in an igloo village high above some of Europe’s most famous ski resorts.

Camp in a hi-tech tent designed with NASA technology or simply dig a hole in the snow (under expert supervision of course) and bed down in there. Besides novelty value, there are other factors that make the experience of sleeping on snow or ice very special.

“Most people are amazed by the beautiful art and the size of the igloo village. They did not expect it to be so big. Otherwise, they are stunned by the nature. When you can see the sunrise in the morning with nobody on the piste, this is just amazing,” says Géraldine Pucken of Iglu-Dorf, the award-winning company behind six igloo villages.

Igloo villages

The location at the top of the slopes has the added bonus that, while the staying in the resort below may be riding up on the first chairlift of the morning, you’re already up and ready to make the first tracks down after a fresh snowfall.

And the art – specifically ice and snow sculptures – which Géraldine says are all around you in the public areas and suites of the hotels and villages, making them still more magical places.

Bar in an iglu
Enjoy the bar in Igls Dorf in Gstaad ©Iglu Dorf GMBH

Iglu-Dorf

Switzerland, Austria or Germany

Iglu-Dorf (‘dorf’ meaning village) gives you a bed for the night high above the Swiss resorts of Davos, Engelberg, Gstaad and Zermatt, and in the Austrian Tyrolean resort of Kühtai, or on the Zugspitz above Garmisch Partenkirchen in Germany.

You’ll find bedrooms filled with beautiful carvings and a bar and restaurant in the public area. There’s even the belief-defying presence of hot tubs in some luxury suites.

The location of the igloo villages are high above the ski resorts, meaning you’re located in the perfect spot not only for star gazing, but also you can hit the slopes before anyone else.

Whitepod

Les Cerniers, Switzerland

If you like your camping a little more futuristic, Whitepod describes themselves as an eco-luxury camp and offers accommodation in NASA-tested hi-tech tents, or ‘pods’ which provide cosy accommodation (each has its own wood-burning stove), backed by luxurious catering in the neighbouring mountain chalet. Apart from comfort and quality, the onus is on eco-friendliness with natural and locally sourced products used throughout the operation wherever possible.

Whitepod operates Switzerland’s only private ski slope, with over 700m of vertical 7km of pistes, so you have it all to yourself! If you want more spacious skiing head to Champery in the Portes du Soleil ski area, about 30 minutes away.

Whitepod at Les Cerniers
Sleeping in the Whitepod at Les Cerniers ©Whitepod

Kakslauttanen Igloo Village

Kakslauttanen, Lapland

This Arctic igloo village, 10km from the ski slopes of Saariselka, offers every type of accommodation – hotel, log cabins and a snow igloo along with ice bar and chapel. What’s different is the hotel also has a village of igloo shaped buildings with glass roofs where you can lie and look up at the (hopefully starry) night sky and if you’re lucky – filled with the northern lights too.

Igloo village
It’s an entire igloo village in Lapland ©Kakslauttanen

Snow Hole

Cairngorm, Scotland

If the thought of a prepared ice hotel or igloo room seems just too easy for you, then you could consider digging your own snow hole and sleeping in that. Mountain and Sea Guides (+44 7787 446 934) offer three-day guided excursion on the Cairngorm Plateau above Aviemore in Scotland during winter months where you do just that.

Your guide will take you on a traverse of the Cairngorm Plateau, the highest, wildest, sub-arctic plateau in Britain. You’ll be shown how to construct your own snow hole where you’ll be able to keep warm at night in your sleeping bag and see by candlelight.

“It doesn’t matter whether or not you are new to the winter mountain environment, as everyone is able to learn new skills and two nights are spent in a snow hole which we dig out into a luxurious palace,” says Mike Arkley of Mountain & Sea Guides

The informal course also includes learning winter day and night navigation skills on the mountain, avalanche awareness, ice axe and crampon training as well as basic rope work and using snow anchors to improve personal security on steep ground.

The Alpeniglu Village

Tyrol, Austria

This is a comprehensive art ice village in the winter scenery of the Kitzbuehel Alps – that’s the Alpeniglu village which welcomes visitors of the SkiWelt Wilder Kaiser – Brixental resort in the Tyrol. The white village with its 18 igloos is located near the Hochbrixen mountain station and is easily accessible for skiers as well as pedestrians. It takes only 8 minutes to get up to the village by gondola.

You can stay the night in an igloo or just enjoy one of the “magical evenings” of food and music. You can complete your stay at the igloos with a torch walk through the winter forest under the stars. Then, enjoy a get-together around a romantic bonfire. Sleep in your own igloo suite with a cozy warm sleeping bag, a high-quality snow-proof mattress and comfortable fur blankets.

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