The snow from the Valentine's Day storm is easy to cut into blocks. We received snow and then sleet and freezing rain, followed by more snow. The sleet and rain holds everything together, as you will discover when you try to shovel it.
Anyway, it is perfect snow for making igloos. As a kid, we would make wonderful snow forts with this kind of snow. (It was worthless for snowmen or snowball fights.) We would make a snow knife out of 1/4" plywood, or a scrap of aluminum siding. Then we would lay a snow block wall, just like a masonry wall. After we had a wall to block the wind, we would start the other walls and tie them all together. Shoulder height was a good place to stop.
We didn't have the skill or patience to arch our walls inward, like you would with an igloo. In hindsight, that was probably a good thing. (At least, we are all still alive.) Instead, we would scrounge for wood scraps, or even cut pine boughs to make our roof. We would end up with a cozy little clubhouse. It was a good place to rest after tromping around the woods and fields. Of course that was in the "good old days" when parents had to drag kids indoors kicking and screaming. So, we had little shelters and leantos scattered around the countryside. That way, we could stay outside when it was dangerously cold.
Building an igloo or snow fort with your kids is a great family project. You can do it in your backyard. You can do it in the evening, after work and dinner. A plastic tarp will make a quick roof. Then throw a tarp, or old rug on the ground. Once you have your shelter built, the whole family can squeeze inside and listen to the wind howl outside. Bring a candle or flashlight for light. Now that's entertainment.