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Tuesday, October 31, 2006

FLOATING SWIMMING POOL

     

Ann L. Buttenwieser, a former Parks Department official, had the great idea 25 years ago of putting a swimming pool on a barge and mooring it somewhere in the city’s 578 miles of waterfront. Yesterday it became a reality. This from the New York Times.

Standing in a terrace garden in Lower Manhattan yesterday, Ms. Buttenwieser watched the Floating Lady float by after it glided under the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge and past Governors Island. It is now more pool than cargo hauler, but it is still not quite ready for its next life as a destination for dog-paddling, backstroking New Yorkers.

It still has to sidle into Pier 2 in Brooklyn Bridge Park, where the last of the pipes and wires will be connected. And one more thing — it must be filled with fresh water. It arrived full of rainwater from storms it sailed through on the way north from the Louisiana shipyard where its makeover began.

The pool is 25 meters long, or half the length of an Olympic-size pool. For swimmers who never learned the metric system, that works out to just over 82 feet. It will have seven lanes and be four feet deep. Also on board will be dressing rooms with bright-colored tops that look like outsize Legos.

It will not stay at Pier 2 once the work is finished. The Parks Department, which will operate it, has yet to decide exactly where it will go.

Ms. Buttenwieser was excited as the Floating Lady passed yesterday. “It’s like having a baby,” she said, “but there you only have to wait nine months.”

Ms. Buttenwieser, 70, was so committed to the idea of floating pools that she started a nonprofit organization, the Neptune Foundation, to make them a reality. So far, the foundation has raised $3 million of the Floating Lady’s $4 million construction cost.

Yes, she was a swimmer in college, but her goal was to draw people to the city’s underused waterfront. To design the pool she recruited Jonathan Kirschenfeld, an architect who once designed a floating theater. (It was never built, he said.)

As they explain it, wherever the Floating Lady ends up, it will be attached to four uprights that will hold it in place, sort of.

“If a fast ferry comes by and there is a certain amount of wake, it will go up and down,” Ms. Buttenwieser said. But it will not tilt much — seasickness is not expected to be a problem on the Floating Lady — and the uprights will keep the Floating Lady from drifting away from its pier.

Her idea for a floating pool came along before the city turned a retired Staten Island ferry boat into a jail. There has been talk of floating bus depots, floating apartment buildings off Staten Island, floating lofts for artists off Harlem.

“From the city’s point of view, the floating pool concept is a very good one,” said the parks commissioner, Adrian Benepe. “Building swimming pools is very, very expensive. And outdoor swimming pools, they have a short life in the summer, and you have to find lots of land for them, which can mean taking over park land that’s used for something else. So a floating pool is an ideal solution.”

October 31, 2006 | Permalink

Comments

There is a one in Germany too...I've been in it this july and saw the interesting statue just down the river from the floating pool? It appears to be 3 men fighting on the water’s surface!

Posted by: aquabot | Sep 27, 2007 7:13:51 AM

It will be interesting to see their heating bills / equipment required. I'll definitely be reading up on this project in the future.

Posted by: Aquabot Guy | Jul 9, 2007 5:54:19 PM

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