The ice bar cometh
Minister Dave Hazle said the church put forward its concerns about another bar being opened in the area and said it will have a negative influence on young people. He also pointed out the added noise and crowd in the area.
However, the church is not going to appeal the decision.
But what is an Ice Bar?
From the website WiseGeek I gleaned this:
An ice bar is a phenomenon that originated in Scandinavia and has since spread to cities around the world, especially to those metropoles known for their tourist industries. The bar is typically frozen to around 23°F (-5°C) and patrons are furnished with coats, hats, earmuffs and gloves before they enter to fight the freeze. An ice bar’s aesthetic is in keeping with the chilly temperatures, with all the furniture, fittings and ice sculptures fashioned from crystal clear ice, often harvested from the Torne River in Sweden and shipped across the world. Vodka is usually the drink of choice and a number of the bars that have opened recently have done so under the auspices of the Absolut Vodka brand, who emblazon the bar with the Absolut logo, suit out their staff in the Absolut livery and stock the shelves with their range of sub-zero vodkas.
A typical Ice Bar will allocate its patrons time slots of around forty minutes each and fit them out with winter wear, or as is the case with the bar recently opened in Mayfair, London, a thermal cape to keep them warm. Patrons enter the frozen chamber of the bar via an air-tight door that keeps the frozen air in and the thaw out. The hermetic chamber affords the bar an otherworldly vibe, which is added to by the chill-out music that enters the bar via ice speakers. Drinks are usually vodka based and a typical menu offers a range of Absolut vodka based cocktails that include the aptly named Absolut Icy River, Absolut Aurora Borealis and Absolut Below Zero.
PHOTO: online wsj.con, CNN & evenbrite.com