Visiting timetable02:00 PM11:00 PM
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Downtown Reykjavík, Iceland
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behind-the-scenes

How Magic Ice Bar Reykjavik Is Built – Ice Sculptures, Design & Freezing Tech

Discover how Magic Ice Bar Reykjavík is constructed and maintained: from sourcing ice blocks to carving sculptures and keeping everything frozen.

2/19/2026
16 min read
Textured ice wall with carvings inside Magic Ice Bar in Reykjavik.

When you step into Magic Ice Bar Reykjavík, it feels like a movie set — glowing, frozen, and oddly delicate. But underneath the magic lies serious engineering and craftsmanship.


The Building Behind the Ice

Magic Ice Bar isn’t a temporary tent in the snow. It lives inside a regular building in Reykjavík, but:

  • The ice section is treated almost like a giant freezer room.
  • Insulation and heavy doors keep the cold trapped.
  • Guests move from a normal-temperature area into the ice bar through a kind of “airlock” entrance.

Thick ice walls and sculptures lit in blue and purple


Where Does All That Ice Come From?

Ice bars typically use:

  • Crystal-clear ice blocks frozen in special conditions so they have fewer bubbles.
  • Sometimes locally inspired pieces, though clarity often beats wild shapes.
  • Pre-measured blocks that can be carved on site like giant Lego.

The ice arrives as raw building material, then sculptors and technicians turn it into:

  • Bar counters.
  • Stools and benches.
  • Walls and tunnels.
  • Detailed sculptures.

Temperature and Freezing Technology

Inside the ice zone, the temperature hovers around -10°C / 14°F. To maintain that:

  • Powerful cooling units run behind walls and ceilings.
  • Sensors monitor temperature and humidity to avoid fogging and melting.
  • Doors are kept closed quickly to preserve the environment.

Good to know: Your short open/close cycle at the door does make a difference — which is why staff gently encourage guests not to linger in the doorway.


How Sculptures Are Designed and Carved

Concepts often revolve around:

  • Icelandic nature – glaciers, waterfalls, lava forms.
  • Viking and saga heritage – helmets, ships, mythical creatures.
  • Local icons – churches, city skylines, animals.

The process usually looks like this:

  1. Sketches and 3D mockups are designed on paper or computer.
  2. Ice blocks are rough-cut into shape with chainsaws.
  3. Finer details appear through chisels, picks, and scrapers.
  4. LED lights are installed to highlight textures and shapes.

Intricate tunnel of ice blocks glowing with blue light


Lighting: Half the Magic

Without lighting, an ice bar would simply be a cold white room. Magic Ice Bar uses:

  • Colored LEDs behind or under sculptures.
  • Spotlights to bring out textures in ice walls.
  • Gentle color transitions to avoid harsh strobe effects.

This is why your photos often look surreal — you’re seeing layers of ice interacting with shifting tones of blue, purple, and pink.


Maintenance and Melting

Ice bars do slowly melt, especially near high-contact areas. To manage this, staff:

  • Regularly scrape and smooth surfaces.
  • Replace heavily worn sculptures or furniture as needed.
  • Keep the bar closed during certain hours for maintenance.

Think of the bar as a living ice gallery — each visit might look slightly different from the last.


Why You Wear a Cape

The guest cape is not just for fun photos:

  • It helps insulate your body so you can comfortably stay inside longer.
  • It reduces direct contact between warm clothing and cold ice surfaces.
  • It keeps a more consistent temperature balance inside the room.

Takeaway

Next time you sip a drink at Magic Ice Bar Reykjavík, take a moment to notice the engineering, logistics, and artistry around you: the clear ice blocks, the color gradients, the crisp air. It’s not just a bar — it’s a constantly maintained piece of Arctic theatre.

About the Author

Reykjavík Ice Bar Expert

Reykjavík Ice Bar Expert

I created this guide to make your Magic Ice Bar visit simple, cozy, and full of local insight — so you can relax and enjoy the glow.

Tags

Magic Ice Bar
Design
Ice Sculptures
Reykjavik
Architecture

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