Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Sutro Baths was a large, privately owned public saltwater swimming pool complex in the Lands End area of the Outer Richmond District in western San Francisco, California. [1] [2] Built in 1894, the Sutro Baths was located north of Ocean Beach, the Cliff House, Seal Rocks, and west of Sutro Heights Park. [1]
The William Woollett Jr. Aquatics Center is an aquatics venue located in Irvine, California, United States. The City of Irvine operates year-round municipal programs in aquatic facility. The center provides a venue for local, regional and national competitive events and features two 50 meter pools and a 25-yard instruction pool.
The Uytengsu Aquatics Center (originally the McDonald's Olympic Swim Stadium) is a 2,500-seat outdoor aquatics venue located on the campus of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. [1] The facility features two pools: a long course pool (50x25 meters), and a diving well (25x25 yards) with towers. [2]
Diving boards at the former Fleishhacker Pool. This is a list of lap pools in San Francisco, California. San Francisco has 44 lap pools. Only lap pools are included on this list. Smaller recreational pools and pools in private residential buildings are not included. There are 5 salt-water pools and 4 outdoor pools.
This category includes beaches, water parks, swimming pools, and other places where people can (or could) go swimming in the U.S. state of California. Subcategories This category has the following 4 subcategories, out of 4 total.
The Como Regional Park Pool is like a water park with public pool prices. In addition to swimming lessons and water aerobics classes, amenities include a 400-foot lazy river, a zip line, an ...
Used in the 2012 Summer Olympics, modified and opened to the public in 2014, it has is two 50-meter swimming pools and a 25-metre diving pool. Empire Pool , London, of complex now the Wembley Arena , built for the 1934 British Empire Games and last used for the 1948 Summer Olympics
The Rose Bowl Aquatics Center opened in 1990 in the former site of the city's defunct Brookside Plunge. The project was funded with a $4.5-million city loan and $2 million in private donations, including a crucial final $430,000 from Pasadena neighbor, Eugene Scott, who was also Vice-Chairman of the Board of the Rose Bowl Aquatics Center and one of its founding directors.