Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the world's largest sauna is the Koi Sauna in the Thermen & Badewelt Sinsheim, Germany. It measures 166 square meters, holds 150 people and sports a koi aquarium. The title may now belong to Cape East Spa in Haparanda, Sweden, [28] which also holds 150 people but is more spacious. However, in ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Pages in category "Sauna" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Koi (鯉, Japanese:, literally "carp"), or more specifically nishikigoi (錦鯉, Japanese: [ɲiɕi̥kiꜜɡoi], literally "brocaded carp"), are colored varieties of carp (Cyprinus sp.) that are kept for decorative purposes in outdoor koi ponds or water gardens. Koi is an informal name for the colored variants of carp kept for ornamental purposes.
Isekai Onsen Paradise (名湯『異世界の湯』開拓記~アラフォー温泉マニアの転生先は、のんびり温泉天国でした~, Meitō "Isekai no Yu" Kaitaku-ki: AraFō Onsen Mania Tensei-saki wa, Nonbiri Onsen Tengoku Deshita, "Pioneer Log of the Storied Hot Springs "Alternate World's Springs": The Reincarnation Destination of an Onsen Fan (Who's Around 40) Was a Relaxing ...
The Grotto Sauna is a private sauna in Georgian Bay, Canada. [1] The building is 75 m 2 (810 sq ft) [2] and consists of a singular room with two benches and two stoves, a large window looking onto the bay and a skylight. A waterside grotto is a subterranean chamber that is chapped and smoothed by receding water currents. The sauna is based ...
It comprises the sauna room as well as a washroom, a dressing/massage room, and a kitchen. [3] The facility was in regular use until 2020, when it was closed down for safety reasons pending refurbishment. [4] It is thought to be England's oldest purpose-built sauna still in use, and the oldest surviving Finnish 'Olympic sauna' anywhere in the ...
A relatively cold bath called mizu-buro (水風呂) is often located directly outside a facility's sauna to allow users to quickly cool down. The cycle of entering hot baths, saunas, and cold baths at an onsen facility is sometimes referred to as totonou (ととのう) and is believed to be refreshing and to have health benefits.