Just a few days after the Chinese New Year, Jan 26 2009, we flew to Harbin. Harbin is one of the northernmost and coldest cities in China. Temperatures can get down to -40 at night (that's the same in C and F), and during the day often does not get above Zero F. Luckily for us, is was not nearly that cold.
We stayed in a very nice hotel just across the Songhau Jiang (river) where the Ice Festival is held in the Taiyangdao Park. You can click on any image to see a larger view.

When you first enter the park, this is what you are greeted with - quite literally a city of ICE!

All the ice comes from the Songhau Jiang and because it is a fast flowing river, it is very clear. You can climb the steps of the building, some have slides, and all are illuminated from within with bright colorful lights.

There are towers and spires, archways and windows, and as you will see later in the video, the lights are animated. All this making it quite a winter wonderland.

All this Ice had it drawbacks, though. It was slippery. Carpet was laid down on the stairs and snow machines blew snow over everything to help give you traction.

Here is an Ice Castle built on top of a hill and coming out of it is a very long ice slide. Walk up the steps next to the slide, buy your ticket and then slide down on a board to the bottom. All made from blocks of ice.

At one end of the park, and rather hard to get to, was a giant snow Buddha. Very beautiful and wonderfully done.
Here is the video I promised earlier. I grand panoramic view of the entire park. You can get a good feel for the size of the sculptures and the park in this video. Yes, that's my sweet, silly wife waving at the end.

Our last photo is of the Entrance/Exit gates - also all in Ice and also illuminated from within.
It was a thrilling experience, and well worth the trip, but it was (as expected) bitterly cold. I was wearing 3 layers of pants, including ski pants and thermals, plus 4 layers of tops including thermals, long sleeve shirt, sweater, vest, plus my heavy coat. We had winter boots with insulated socks and heavy insulated gloves. I was wearing an insulated hat with ear protection and a hood, plus a scarf around my face.
Whenever I wanted to take a photo with my phone, I had to take my gloves off because the touch screen was skin-touch sensitive. I froze my fingers, so I didn't do that often. The first battery in my camera went from about 80% charge to Zero in about 10 minutes. The second battery did manage to last throughout the night. But it wasn't until we ducked into a small coffee shop and had some hot coco that we warmed up enough to stay out enough to see all of the park.
Of course, the natives of Harbin were dressed quite different: we saw people wearing simply jeans, boots, a jacket, thin gloves and occasionally a hat - at 20f below! Wow! I guess after living there all your life, you get used to it...