How the snow is made: Ski Dubai offers exceptional snow quality with 22,500m² covered with real snow all year round – (equivalent to 3 football fields). The temperature is normally maintained at a comfortable -1º to -2º Celsius. The slope itself is built like an upside-down 'L,' and is 400m long from one end to the other with a width range of 80m. The entire slope is covered with at least three feet of snow, generated by patented snowmakers that mimic the natural precipitation process to deliver real, high-quality snowflakes to the slope and surrounding chilled areas. The left-hand side of the slope is a mainly straight run designed for professionals. FEATURES - 85 meters high (approximately 25 stories) and 80 meters wide - 5 different runs of varying difficulty and length, longest run of 400 meters - Full capacity of 1500 guests - Freestyle zone - Permanent: 1/4 pipe snowboard area - 3,000m² Snow Park with a snow cavern - Quad chairlift, tow lift and flying carpets - Mountain resort theme SNOW MAKING Snow is made using a simple procedure similar to how snow is artificially made at outdoor ski resorts. Pure water, with no chemicals added, is put through a chiller to cool. It is then sent through pipes to the snow guns which are on the ceiling. When the cooled water is blown out into a freezing cold environment it crystallizes and makes snow. The temperature during the time when snow is made is -7c to -8c. The final product is real snow, as if it came from nature!Click to see how snow is made inside Ski Dubai (pdf will open in a new window) MAINTAINING THE TEMPERATURE The Ski Dubai facility is specially designed as a massive cold box. The walls have numerous levels of insulation and the roof is 5 meters higher than the ceiling providing very efficient insulation. This makes Ski Dubai one of the best refrigerators in the world! There are 23 blast coolers (air conditioner type machines) that chill the air and maintain a temperature of -1c during operating hours. There are also kilometers of glycol tubing running through the floor (similar to the back of your refrigerator) that chills the snow keeping the base of the snow solid and 30 tons of fresh snow is made daily to cover the base. http://www.skidubai.com/skidubai/ski_Dubai/ Picture of Park & Kempinski hotel http://www.skidubai.com/ http://www.skidubai.com/skidubai/ski_Dubai/default.asp Ski Dubai Overview Ski Dubai resort map At Ski Dubai you will enjoy: - Use of quality equipment and clothing included in the ticket price - Qualified professional instructors - State of the art ticketing system - Changing areas with locker rental - Private kids party rooms - Exclusive retail shop – Snow Pro - St Moritz Café and Avalanche Cafe Urban Legends Origins:   Once upon a time, our participation in certain outdoor activities was limited by geography and the calendar. If you wanted to ski, you had to go to part of the world that receives ample snowfall. If you wanted to ice skate or play hockey, you had to be in a place where outdoor temperatures reliably remained below freezing. If you wanted to play baseball, you needed a fairly large, flat piece of land in an area with relatively dry and warm weather.

Nowadays, however, modern technology has removed many of those restrictions. Refrigeration has made ice sports such as skating and hockey possible even in the warmest of climates. Domed stadiums and artificial turf allow team sports like baseball and football to be played indoors and in areas where the weather might ordinarily be too cold, too hot, or too inclement to comfortably allow it. Snow-manufacturing machines help ski runs operate even when natural snowfall might otherwise be too light for them to remain open. And, of course, all of these innovations remove not just restrictions of geography, but of the calendar as well — ice and snow eventually melt as seasons change, but indoor ice rinks can operate year-round.

The ultimate in geography- and calendar-defeating mechanisms might be indoor ski slopes, facilities that make use of snow cannons and refrigeration to create and maintain snowy, climate-controlled conditions and provide skiers with at least some gentle slopes that can be enjoyed at any time of year, regardless of the weather outside. The first such facility was the Snowdome (formerly Mt. Thebarton), which opened in Adelaide, Australia, in 1987.

Over a dozen additional indoor ski facilities have been constructed in various cities around the world in the last few decades, including the one shown in the photographs displayed above: Ski Dubai, a 22,500-square meter indoor skiing area boasting five slopes of varying difficulty, height, and steepness housed within the Mall of the Emirates in the city of Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (Other interior photos of the facility as well as additional pictures taken during its construction in 2005 can be found in the gallery section of the Ski Dubai web site.)

Creating a facility that could maintain a 6,000-ton snow base and a constant -1°C to -2°C temperature in a desert climate such as Dubai's posed something of a formidable challenge, one which engineers met thusly:
Ski Dubai has real snow. Snow is made using a simple procedure similar to how snow is artificially made at outdoor ski resorts. Pure water, with no chemicals added, is put through a chiller to cool. It is then sent through pipes to the snow guns which are on the ceiling. When the cooled water is blown out into a freezing cold environment, it crystallises and makes snow. The temperature during the time when snow is made is -7c to -8c. The final product is real snow, as if it came from nature. We just give it a little help.

Our facility is specially designed as a massive cold box. The walls have numerous levels of insulation, and the roof is 5 metres higher than the ceiling, providing very efficient insulation. This makes Ski Dubai one of the best refrigerators in the world! We have 23 blast coolers (air conditioner type machines) that chill the air and maintain a temperature of -1c during operating hours. There are also kilometres of glycol tubing running through the floor (similar to the back of your refrigerator) that chill the snow, keeping the base of the snow solid, and 30 tons of fresh snow are made daily to cover the base. http://english.aljazeera.net/English/archive/archive?ArchiveId=11691 Dubai desert gives way to ski resort Nothing could be more bizarre than a ski resort in a desert but Dubai is making it happen later this year when residents and tourists will have the option to don boots and woolly hats and hit the slopes. The resort is being built at the billion-dollar Mall of the Emirates Ski Dubai is a formidable engineering feat, an incongruous 25-storey structure rising from the Gulf emirate's sands as some 1000 labourers work round the clock building the Middle East's only indoor ski resort and the world's third largest. The brainchild of Majid al-Futtaim, the mountain-themed resort is being built within his group's billion-dollar Mall of the Emirates, partly to lure people to what will be the third largest shopping centre in the world, and to make it different. In September, the state-of-the-art resort, boasting a slope with an overall length of 400 metres, will allow enthusiasts, beginners or those merely curious, to experience real snow, complete with falling snow flakes and a log fire under sky blue panels to give the ideal outdoor effect. And all this as temperatures outside soar. Winter activities "This isn't just about skiing but an opportunity to introduce winter activities and snow play to a lot of people that have never seen snow before in their lives," said Phil Taylor, Ski Dubai's chief executive. The resort will feature five trails of varying gradients "We're really trying to introduce people to winter sports and fun in a way they have never had an opportunity to experience before in the region", he told AFP. The resort will feature five different trails of varying gradients. The slope itself is not straight but with a 60-degree bend. Steep areas necessitated building sections of the slope in steps, compared to the majority of it being built on a smooth profile, "because there's actually a risk of an avalanche if we weren't careful," he said. "It's quite amazing to be tackling these sorts of problems and challenges here in Dubai," said Taylor, no stranger to huge projects, including the London Eye observation wheel. Tourist attraction The resort will feature a midway cafe while the space underneath the slope will be used for the changing rooms and an outdoor play area, with hills for sliding and tobogganing, as well as an ice cavern. There will also be a snowboard stunt park and 90-metre-long quarter-pipe. "We're hoping that for people familiar with skiing it's a novelty factor to have been able to go skiing in the morning and sunbathing in the afternoon" Phil Taylor, Ski Dubai chief executive "Dubai is growing rapidly which is really creating an opportunity for an attraction like this," said Taylor, adding that Ski Dubai will target an equal mix of residents and tourists, some five million of whom visited the bustling emirate in 2004. "We're hoping that for people familiar with skiing it's a novelty factor to have been able to go skiing in the morning and sunbathing in the afternoon," he said. "It's a great place to polish your skills if you're going on a winter holiday or planning one, or if you want to learn to ski, because we control the conditions and have a team of professional instructors, it's perfect for learners. "We really have got this opportunity to be both a sports facility at one end of the scale and pure play and fun at the other," Taylor said. Real snow Ski Dubai, covering an area of 22,500 square metres, or the equivalent of three football fields, will use 6000 tons of real snow settling 50 centimetres thick. It will have a capacity of 1500 people at any one time while the objective is to try and attract 500,000 visitors a year, Taylor said. Thirty tons of fresh snow will be made every night to replenish the slope when the indoor temperature will be reduced from minus one Celsius throughout the day to about minus seven. The slope will be visible from two levels of the mall and four floors of the adjoining Kempinski Hotel. A professional team of instructors and staff will be on hand from countries including France, Lebanon, the Netherlands, South Africa and the United States. "One of the things that we've really tried to put quite a lot of emphasis on is that ... coming inside is an experience. Ski Dubai has got so much more to offer than just skiing," said Taylor.