I'm currently in the process of putting together a committee to start planning for a new aquatic facility in our area. I'm asking all of you to help me make a list of the things that should go into a facility if you had unlimited resources and space. I want to start my project with the biggest dream possible and then have it brought back to earth by money limitations, etc.
What I'm looking for are comments about our own facilities features that work well, that you would never do again, that you would change, that you would do differently, and what you wish you could have. I want to hear from experience.... What makes your facility work so well or why you pool is the arm pit of pools. Here is an example:
I've learned from one pool that they should have built a permanent wall between their lap pool and their zero depth entry rec. pool. The building is so noisy they can barely run a meet if people are in the recreation pool. Don't leave anything untouched (pool size, deck space, configuration, locker rooms, office space, outdoor facilities, observation seating, etc.)
Our initial plan is to build a 50 meter indoor, with adjacent recreation pool, and an outdoor splash area for the hot summers. We are one mile above sea level and our winters go from October to May. I'm hoping all you can help with the things you have all learned from the many years we have been swimming.
- The 50m x 25m main pool has a boom that moves along the poolside rather than being raised up and down, so the pool can be split into 2 x 25m x 25m pools. Many 50m pools only split into a 25m and 23m pool.
This is a good point. Ideally a 50 m pool should be 50 meters long, plus whatever extra is needed to have two bulkheads. That way you put the bulkheads at each end for a 50 meter course, or you put them in the middle for 2x25 m courses. Move them in slightly and you've got two 25 yard courses. The pool should be 25 meters wide. That gives you the ultimate in terms of flexibility of courses.
- The 50m x 25m main pool has a boom that moves along the poolside rather than being raised up and down, so the pool can be split into 2 x 25m x 25m pools. Many 50m pools only split into a 25m and 23m pool.
This is a good point. Ideally a 50 m pool should be 50 meters long, plus whatever extra is needed to have two bulkheads. That way you put the bulkheads at each end for a 50 meter course, or you put them in the middle for 2x25 m courses. Move them in slightly and you've got two 25 yard courses. The pool should be 25 meters wide. That gives you the ultimate in terms of flexibility of courses.