Sapporo Snöfestival
The Sapporo Snow Festival is held over about a week in early February each year across three Sapporo venues — Odori Park, Susukino, and Tsudome — and is Japan's largest winter event. It began in 1950 when six local middle and high school students built six snow sculptures in Odori Park; today it draws over 2 million visitors from around the world. Highlights include massive snow sculptures over 15 m built by the Japan Self-Defense Forces, citizen-made sculptures, the International Snow Sculpture Contest, ice carvings, evening projection mapping, and the snow activities at the Tsudome venue, transforming northern Sapporo into a «city of snow art» for one full week.
Highlights
- Odori Site (JSDF Sculptures) — over 15 m tall, taking the Self-Defense Forces about a month to build, modeled on famous landmarks worldwide
- International Snow Sculpture Contest — 11 countries and regions compete, completing sculptures in three days
- Evening Projection Mapping — 18:00–22:00, with dynamic light and music projected onto the giant sculptures
- Tsudome Venue — interactive snow festival with slides and blizzard experiences, popular with families
- Susukino Ice Festival — finely crafted ice sculptures by international artists, magically illuminated at night
Quick Answers
Practical Information
- Access
- Sapporo Subway «Odori» station (Odori venue) or «Susukino» (ice carvings).
- Parking
- Public transit recommended; surrounding paid lots fill up.
- Admission
- Free viewing.
- Duration
- 4-5 hr to cover all venues.
- Best Time
- Early February, post-sunset to 21:00 illumination.



