Published 12:54 PM EST, Thu December 8, 2016 The original pop-up — Sweden's ICEHOTEL, which has been built and rebuilt every year since 1989, is now open year-round. The Victorian Apartment (pictured) is designed by Luca Roncoroni. New solar-powered cooling technology will allow part of the hotel, including a bar, gallery and 10 luxury suites, to host guests right through the summer months. The hotel has all the fixtures and fittings you'd expect in a luxury hotel -- just they're made out of frozen H2O. The building material used for the hotel is called 'snice' (a snow and ice mixture). Construction involves enough of it to make 700 million snowballs. The pictured suite was designed by Luc Voisin and Mathieu Brison. Around 580 artists have created works for the hotel since it was founded in 1989. This art suite features 'Dancers in the Dark,' designed by Tjåsa Gusfors and Patrick Dallard. The ambient temperature might be -5 C, but there are thick capes, high-quality sleeping bags and luxury fur throws to keep guests cosy. This room, titled 'Don't Get Lost,' was designed by Tommy Alatalo. This deluxe suite features the artwork 'Kiss,' designed by Kestutis and Vytautas Musteikis. Not everything in the hotel is made of ice. There is a spa and sauna to relax in away from the elements. The entrance to the Ice Art Hall. ICEHOTEL 365 is built on the site of a former refrigeration plant. To ensure guests don't miss the Northern Lights, there's a special auroral alarm. The hotel has its own chapel, which hosts around 100 weddings each year. That's a lot of happy snow queens. About 27,000 cocktails are consumed each season in the Icebar, which now has branches worldwide.