Harbin:In the dark depths of winter in the northernmost province of China, a riot of fireworks and twinkling lights sparkle in the night sky.
A glittering winter wonderland built of ice and snow and sprawling across four enormous sites has been unveiled to thousands of delighted visitors and locals.
Here, thousands are braving some of the coldest temperatures in China to experience an annual display that glitters and shimmers. And this extraordinary spectacle is built entirely of snow and ice.
The 2020 Harbin Snow and Ice Festival officially opened this weekend. The event - in its 36th year - attracts millions of visitors from all over the world.
The festival sprawls across four sites, with the largest two the Sun Island Snow Park, and the Harbin Ice and Snow Park, both near the banks of north-eastern China's mighty Songhua River.
This year, the Sun Island Snow Park covers an area of 600,000 square meters.
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110,000 cubic meters of snow have been used to build the ice-cold environment and the structures.
In the main, the artists work outside, in temperatures that rarely rise above -15 degrees Celsius (5 degrees Fahrenheit). Here in Snow Park, the sculptures made from packed snow tell a uniquely Chinese story.
There are rats some giving the thumbs-up sign to mark the start of the Year of the Rat on the Chinese Zodiac calendar. There's also a phoenix, carved from the snow: in Chinese culture, the phoenix symbolises femininity and grace.
It displays like these that are winning over even the most cynical of visitors, like Chen Chen, who has traveled here from the much milder climes of Shanghai.
"(At first) I thought it was boring to see the sculptures. (But) once I am here and become part of the environment, I feel different. The frigid weather and the snow only enhance the beauty of each one at this moment," he says.
With its famously long, cold winters and its short cool summers, Harbin is known throughout China for its ice and snow. Here on the city's Central Avenue, a shopping area famous for its Russian-style architecture, locals and tourists can admire ice and snow sculptures every few meters.
And it doesn't all come together overnight. At the beginning of every December, local workers start the painstaking work of preparing the Harbin Ice and Snow Park.
They cut into the frozen Songhua River, and drag and haul large chunks of ice which are then shaped into all manner of structures, from castles to slides.
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