Although a whole set of positive traits is assigned to ‘warmth’, ‘cold’ is often perceived as a burden. For Arctic residents ‘cold’ has provided opportunities to ‘enact’, experiment with and relate to it in many ways. Several economic sectors in the Arctic are very much focused on winter season – tourism, reindeer herding, vehicle testing industry, etc. Cold environment is conceptualized at a range of scales concerning the meanings and uses in relation to economic activities, regulations, mobility and risks. The research is focused on multiple forms of uses of cold in the Arctic regions (Finland, Norway, Russia). It analyses processes of ‘turning’ cold into a valuable symbolic and economic resource, creating a vision for winter in the context of environmental changes. Anthropology of cold investigates how physical properties of coldscape are experienced, used and interpreted among northern residents in a variety of social settings and different frameworks.