People have tried building artificial glaciers in Ladakh before. But those were at high elevations that were hard for villagers to reach. Wangchuk thought the ice should be closer to the villages. This would make it easier for farmers to use the water in the spring.
Wangchuk and his team built their first ice stupa in 2013. The team builds the structures on winter nights, when the air temperature is below freezing. Underground, where it is warmer, glacier water flows downhill through cracks in the ground. Workers lay long pipes to carry this groundwater into a vertical spout near the village. They build a dome-shaped wooden frame around the spout (see Inside an Ice Stupa, page 17). Water flows through the pipe, sprays out of the spout, and freezes solid in the cold air.
Over the winter, this process builds up a large cone of ice, says Simant Verma, a former manager with the Ice Stupa Project. In the spring, when temperatures rise above freezing, water flows down from the stupa and into the village.