People had previously tried solving the water shortage in Ladakh by creating artificial glaciers. But they were built high up in the mountains, making them hard for villagers to reach. Wangchuk thought the ice should be closer to settlements to make it easier for farmers to access the water in the spring. So the came up with the Ice Stupa Project. In 2013, he and his team built their first ice stupa.
To create a stupa, workers lay a long pipe to collect glacier water flowing through cracks underground, where temperatures are warmer (see How an Ice Stupa Works). The pipe connects to a vertical spout near a village. Because the pipe starts at a higher elevation and ends at a lower one, only the force of gravity is needed to draw water through the pipe—no pumps or electricity required. Around the spout, workers build a dome-shaped wooden frame covered in netting. During winter nights, when the air temperature is below freezing, a person opens the pipe’s valve. Pressure causes water to shoot out of the top of the spout. The water falls on the netting below and turns to ice.
Periodically, workers increase the height of the ice stupa’s spout so the tower can grow taller. This process builds up a large cone of ice, says Simant Verma, a former manager with the Ice Stupa Project. This tall cone shape ensures the ice doesn’t melt too quickly as temperatures warm. The reason is that a vertical mound of ice has less surface area exposed to the sun than a wide, flat glacier containing the same volume of water. Come spring, the ice stupa begins to melt, sending water flowing down to the village. This continues through the early summer.