A Snowstorm in Denmark Led Ikea Customers, Staff to Spend the Night in the StoreThose trapped inside made the best of their bad-weather situation, watching television and enjoying the department store's food.

ByAmanda Breen

An Ikea showroom in northern Denmark was transformed into a sprawling bedroom after a snowstorm forced six customers and about two dozen employees to shelter in the Swedish-founded furniture store,AP News reports.

Up to 30 centimeters, or 12 inches, of snowfall left the customers and employees stranded when the Aalborg-located Ikea closed on Wednesday evening. But those trapped in the department store made the best of their bad-weather situation, watching television and enjoyingthe shop's culinary offerings, which included stuffed pork, warm cinnamon buns, the Danish Christmas dessert risalamande and hot chocolate.

Related:Why the "IKEA Effect" Is Killing Your Entrepreneurial Dream

Store manager Peter Elmose toldEkstra Bladet, a Danish tabloid newspaper: "We slept in the furniture exhibitions and our showroom on the first floor, where we have beds, mattresses and sofa beds." He added that the impromptu guests were able to "pick the exact bed they always have wanted to try."

According to Denmark's public broadcaster DR, people working in the toy shop next door also spent the night in the Ikea.

"It's much better than sleeping in one's car. It has been nice and warm and we are just happy that they would let us in," Michelle Barrett, one of the toy store's employees, told DR. "We just laughed at the situation, because we will probably not experience it again," she continued.

Related:Ikea Fined Millions of Dollars After Being Caught Spying on Employees and Customers

In the morning,the group of overnighters was treated to coffeeand additional cinnamon buns, and Elmose sent each guest home with a free pillow to commemorate the unique experience.

Amanda Breen

Entrepreneur Staff

Features Writer

Amanda Breen is a features writer at Entrepreneur.com. She is a graduate of Barnard College and received an MFA in writing at Columbia University, where she was a news fellow for the School of the Arts.

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