Swimming pools for London’s River Thames by Studio Octopi

London architecture firm Studio Octopi has designed a concept for swimming pools that would enable Londoners to enjoy views of the city centre while bathing in the tidal waters of the River Thames.

Thames Bath Project by Studio Octopi

Studio Octopi developed the proposal in response to plans from the city’s water supplier Thames Water to upgrade London’s 150-year-old sewage system, which would result in a huge improvement in water purity.

“A lot of people screw their noses up at the thought of swimming in the Thames but it already occurs within very controlled conditions, such as at Hampton Court and the Docklands,” Studio Octopi director Chris Romer-Lee told Dezeen.

Thames Bath Project by Studio Octopi

Thames Water plans to construct a new tunnel, dubbed the Super Sewer, which will remove 96 percent of the sewage currently entering the river and is scheduled for completion in 2023, if planning permission is granted.

Thames Bath Project by Studio Octopi
Exploded view of structure

Studio Octopi proposes building pools at two of the Super Sewer construction sites; Shadwell in the east of the city and Blackfriars Bridge in central London.

“Imagine the views from the waterline, downstream to the London Eye, upstream to the City,” said Romer-Lee of the Blackfriars location. “Whether it’s for sport or leisure, bringing these alternative uses to the heart of cities unites diverse communities, encourages physical activity and invigorates the flora and fauna of our much overlooked river.”

Thames Bath Project by Studio Octopi
Plan – click for annotated larger image

Romer-Lee pointed out that the concept doesn’t rely on the Super Sewer, but does require the UK government to take steps to improve the current sewage system and water quality in The Thames, which currently falls below European standards.

The architects worked with structural engineering specialist Civic Engineers to develop the design, which includes a pair of pools supported by a concrete slab and raised to the height of the high water mark on a series of steel columns. The pools would be replenished with fresh river water at high tides.

A further pool made from concrete waffle slabs anchored to fixed posts would float on the surface of the river, rising and falling with the tide while protecting swimmers from the tidal currents.

Thames Bath Project by Studio Octopi
Sketch showing view from the water

Concrete decks with cast-in air pockets would surround the pools, providing places for swimmers to rest and counterbalancing heavy gabion cages filled with rocks and plants.

Jonathan Cook Landscape Architects contributed ideas for planting to enhance the natural look of the pools, including reeds to fringe the floating pool and perennials and ferns along the wharf edge. Over time, algae, ferns and saline plants would cover the supporting structure as it gradually weathers, while native plants would colonise the planted areas.

Thames Bath Project by Studio Octopi
Concept sketch

Studio Octopi’s design was one of five proposals created by teams chosen to submit ideas for a project called London As It Could Be Now, developed by The Architecture Foundation with architecture firm Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners.

The concepts for new ways to make the most of the River Thames were presented last autumn as part of the exhibition Richard Rogers RA: Inside Out, at London’s Royal Academy.

Images are by Picture Plane.

The architects sent us the following details:


London-based architects Studio Octopi propose reintroducing swimming in the tidal River Thames

As a result of the collaborative London As It Could Be Now project, developed by The Architecture Foundation with Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners and the Royal Academy of Arts, Studio Octopi were selected as one of five teams to work up new visions for the Thames. The teams were encouraged to explore ideas that increased interaction with the waterway and raised awareness of this important artery running through the Capital. Thames Baths Project is collaboration between architects Studio Octopi, Civic Engineers and Jonathan Cook Landscape Architects.

In 1865, Sir Joseph Bazalgette’s London sewage system was opened. 150 years later the sewers are at the limits of their capacity. In 2012, 57 combined sewer overflows discharged 39 million tonnes of sewage into the River Thames.

Thames Water is planning the Thames Tideway Tunnel, or ‘Super Sewer’, for completion in 2023. This tunnel will remove 96% of the sewage currently entering the river. Instead of a weekly discharge into the river, the Super Sewer will overflow a maximum of 4 times a year.

When Sir Joseph Baselgette’s sewer system was finally completed in 1875 swimming in the River became a common occurence. In the same year a floating swimming baths opened on the foreshore at Charing Cross. Heated river water was pumped around an iron and glass structure. Then in 1878 Agnes Beckwith ‘the greatest lady swimmer in the world’ safely swam 20 miles from Richmond to Westminster and back again. The improvements in water quality open the possibility for once again swimming in the tidal Thames. The Thames Baths Project looks to re-establish an intimate and playful link between Londoners and the historic lifeblood of the city, the River Thames. Here is an opportunity for Londoner’s to reclaim ownership of their largest outdoor public space.

Studio Octopi’s proposals are focused on two of the Super Sewer construction sites: Blackfriars Bridge Foreshore and King Edward Memorial Park Foreshore. These sites were chosen for their contrasting London contexts. As well as creating a community resource and tourist attraction, its proposed that these floating and fixed aquatic landscapes should also continue to improve the ecology of the River Thames. Growing from planted rock cages (gabions) an array of native planting forms enclosure and frames views to the surrounding city. The fixed pools, lifted high on timber and steel piles, are replenished at high tide like coastal rockpools. The floating pools rise and fall with the tide offering a unique experience with the river. The sunken structure protects the swimmers from currents, whilst the planting offers tantalising views to the city beyond.

Intertidal Flora by Jonathan Cook Landscape Architects

Imagine swimming in the tidal river, surrounded by reeds that frame tantalising views of the city around you. The pools are not just for swimmers, but provide refuge and habitat for fish, birds and a wide range of flora.

Here in the heart of London is the upstream limit of saline plants on the Thames, and a series of layered habitats. From the algal slime at the base of the structure to the gabion-protected surface planting, the stages mimic salt marshes to freshwater wetlands.

As the supporting timbers weather they will be colonised by algae, ferns and saline plants such as sea beet and sea aster. The extensive planting of reeds around the pools will frame viewpoints edged with low sedums, and surface beds of yellow flag iris. The flooded pool will feature salt marsh species such as rushes and water plantains, while the wharf edge planting will be a relaxed mix of colourful perennials (red valerian) and ferns. All planted areas will soon be accompanied by naturally colonising plants, some native, others typical of London’s introduced alien flora.

Structural Principles by Civic Engineers

The fixed structure consists of a randomly ordered grillage of small sectioned steel channels founded in the river bed and extending to a height just below the high water mark. Embedded within the frame will be non-structural timber members to encourage the colonisation by flora. The fixed pools are split across two levels and sit on a concrete slab suspended on the steel frame.

The second adjoining floating structure is free to rise and fall with the tide. This is restrained with a series of substantial fixed posts which allow the open concrete waffle slab to rise and fall. Surrounding the pools, a concrete deck with cast-in air pockets counterbalances the weight of the planted rock gabion cages. The concrete deck can be precast off site and floated up the river into position.

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Wiel Arets’ Jellyfish House features an elevated swimming pool with a glazed underside

A rooftop swimming pool with a glass floor cantilevers out beside the entrance to this house in Marbella, Spain, by Dutch office Wiel Arets Architects (+ slideshow).

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

Named Jellyfish House, the three-storey concrete residence was designed by Wiel Arets Architects with a rooftop terrace and swimming pool to allow residents to swim and sunbathe with a view of the Mediterranean sea over neighbouring houses.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

The swimming pool projects out across a semi-enclosed terrace beside the house’s main ground-floor entrance, projecting ripples of light onto the ground below.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets_dezeen_6sq

The rear wall of the pool also features a large interior window, allowing residents in the first-floor kitchen to look out at friends and family taking a swim.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

“The searing Spanish sun constantly filters through the pool’s glass wall and floor, creating ripples of iridescent turquoise reflections throughout the entire house,” explained the design team.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets_dezeen_11

Another indoor window creates a view through from the kitchen to a living room below the pool, where glass walls slide back to open the space out to the elements.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

Staircases are also exposed to the weather and are divided into “fast” and “slow” routes, just like V House completed by the same architect last year.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

The gently inclined slow route spans the length the house, connecting all three floors with the roof terrace, while the adjacent fast stair offers direct access from the exterior to the roof.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

Five bedrooms are shared out between the ground and first floor of the building. On the ground floor, two single bedrooms share a central en suite bathroom, while a master bedroom sits beyond.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets_dezeen_11

Two guest bedrooms can be found on the partially submerged basement level, which emerges from the ground at the south-eastern end of the site to offer a secluded extra terrace.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

“Taking full advantage of the ever-present Spanish sun, the Jellyfish House is an avant-garde expression of luxurious living,” said the designers. “As most of its facades can be opened and as its staircases are mainly outdoor, the house’s ever shifting boundaries between inside and outside are curiously blurred.”

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

Other unusual details include a service elevator that allows food and drink to be sent up from the kitchen to the roof, televisions and audio devices that are recessed into the walls, and a first-floor sauna and steam room.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

Photography is by Jan Bitter.

Here is some information from the architects:


Jellyfish House

Located in Marbella, on the Mediterranean coast of Spain, the Jellyfish House’s neighbouring buildings block its view onto the nearby sea. Appropriately, it was chosen to cantilever the house’s pool from its roof, so that the beach and sea can always be seen while sunbathing or swimming.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

The house is organised around two paths of circulation: a ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ set of stairs, which intertwine and traverse the house’s four levels of living. The ‘fast’ stair leads from the exterior directly to the roof; it is enclosed in glass, which physically separates it from the house’s interior, yet it is simultaneously open to the exterior elements, so that sand is not brought into the house when returning from the beach. The ‘slow’ stair – whose long treads and short risers lend it its name – spans the entire length of the house, from ground floor main-entry to roof; it is indoors yet also open to the exterior elements, further amplifying the house’s capacity for ‘interiority’.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

The house’s rooftop pool is cantilevered 9 m southwest – toward the Sierra Blanca mountain range in the distance – and weighs nearly 60,000 kg. Equipped with an infinity-edge, its water merges with the sea in the distance. This pool has a glass-bottom floor and a panoramic window at its interior facing edge, both of which are 6 cm thick; the latter allows those in the kitchen to voyeuristically view those swimming, while a third window affords those in the kitchen a glimpse of the living room, whose terrace extends under the cantilevered pool.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

The searing Spanish sun constantly filters through the pool’s glass wall and floor, creating ripples of iridescent turquoise reflections throughout the entire house. As such, the pool can be seen and experienced from nearly all areas of the house. Integrated within the pool is an underwater bench, which traces its length and also integrates a pool cover, so that it is out of sight when the pool is in use.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

Five bedrooms are located throughout the house, with two guest bedrooms situated on the basement level that face outward and onto an extensive private terrace for the exclusive use of guests. As the ‘slow’ stair leads from the main entry to the guest bedrooms below, this area of the house is able to function as a separate entity.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

The kitchen is strung along the southern facade of the house’s first floor, with all secondary appliances built into an adjacent and perpendicular hallway. The first floor is also the location of the sauna and steam bath. A small service elevator also allows, for instance, food and drink to be brought from the kitchen, or any other floor, up to the rooftop pool and terrace. This roof terrace features an oversized and custom-designed concrete table with an adjoining bench, which is contiguous to an angular chair for reclining while sunbathing.

Jellyfish House Wiel Arets_dezeen_103

The house’s structure is composed of poured in place white-concrete, supported by one column at the right-rear edge of its pool, and several smaller columns near the rear-dining terrace. All non-concrete walls were constructed with glazing, which allows sunlight to permeate the house. Multiple bedroom closets, whose obverse faces the ground floor hallway, are finished in translucent glazing to compound this sunlight diffusing strategy. Oversized and accordion-like folding panels of translucent glazing adjoin each dining or entertaining space, which, when opened, essentially expands the house’s numerous areas of living by nearly doubling their size.

Jellyfish House Wiel Arets_dezeen_102

All of the house’s audio-video equipment – such as its countless Bose speakers – are recessed into its ceilings and walls, which allows them to disappear within their context little noticed. Lighting illuminates all corridors and staircases, as well as underwater within the pool, ensuring the rippling effects of its reflections that shimmer through its glass floor and wall can also be experienced throughout the house at night.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

Taking full advantage of the ever-present Spanish sun, the Jellyfish House is an avant-garde expression of luxurious living; as most of its facades can be opened, and as its staircases are mainly outdoor, the house’s ever shifting boundaries between inside and outside are curiously blurred.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets

Location: Los Monteros, 29600 Marbella, Spain
Program: Housing
Size: 650 m2
Date of design: 1998-2001
Date of completion: Winter 2013
Project team: Wiel Arets, Bettina Kraus, Lars Dreessen, Dennis Villanueva, Carlos Ballesteros
Collaborators: Paul Draaijer, William Fung, Johannes Kappler
Client: Private
Consultants: West 8, ABT BV, Cauberg-Huygen Raadgevende Ingenieurs BV, Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos S.L.

Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets
Basement floor plan – click for larger image
Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets
First floor plan – click for larger image
Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets
Roof plan – click for larger image
Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets
Long section AA – click for larger image
Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets
Long section BB – click for larger image
Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets
Cross sections CC and DD – click for larger image
Jellyfish House by Wiel Arets
Cross sections FF and EE – click for larger image

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Swimming Pools by Franck Bohbot

Frank Bohbot sublime les endroits qu’il capture. Avec une attention particulière pour les couleurs et les lignes architecturales des piscines qu’il photographie, il en fait des situations uniques dotées d’une charge émotionnelle particulière. Un travail superbe à découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by João Mendes Ribeiro

Portuguese architect João Mendes Ribeiro clad this swimming pool pavilion with mirrored panels so it disappears into the surrounding orchard (+ slideshow).

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

João Mendes Ribeiro added the pool and pavilion in the grounds of a countryside property in central Portugal without disturbing the garden too much.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

“The swimming pool was settled in a way that would allow to avoid changes on the terrain morphology and not to interfere with the existing vegetation, keeping the orchard’s character almost untouched and favouring the landscape scenic atmosphere,” said the architect.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

Polished stainless steel sheets cover the small building at one end of the pool, which houses a pantry, toilet, shower and small storage room arranged in a row.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

These mirrors reflect the landscape around the pool so from some angles the building is camouflaged amongst the trees.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

The small rooms within the structure are entered through panels that swing open on both sides of the building. Its thin roof overhangs to provide poolside shade.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

The pool sits to one side of a granite platform that’s level with the ground at the pavilion end but is accessed by stairs at the other to compensate for the gently sloping site.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

A single set of steps leads into the water from a corner by the pavilion.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

João Mendes Ribeiro has also converted the former house of a Portuguese poet into a writer’s retreat. Our latest story from Portugal is a collection of farm buildings revamped into a minimal family home.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

We recently featured aerial photos that reveal the angular geometries of a rooftop swimming pool in Bangkok and have previously posted a plunge pool at a Stockholm house that looks like an aquarium.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

See more swimming pool designs »
See more architecture and design in Portugal »

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro

Here’s some text from the architect:


Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira

The swimming pool in Chamusca da Beira is located in a rural property whose landscape is characterised by the presence of large and small scale trees, in an orchard area with ornamental and fruit trees.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro
Plan – click for larger image and key

The swimming pool was settled in a way that would allow to avoid changes on the terrain morphology and not to interfere with the existing vegetation, keeping the orchard’s character almost untouched and favouring the landscape scenic atmosphere.

Swimming Pool in Chamusca da Beira by Joao Mendes Ribeiro
Section – click for larger image

The swimming pool is surrounded by a granite stone platform where, in one of its extremities, relies the volume containing the swimming pool dependencies (one pantry, one toilet, one shower and a small storage room). This volume is coated with polished stainless steel sheets that, by being highly reflective, allow the camouflage of the volume on its surroundings, dematerialising its presence and visually extending the landscape.

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by João Mendes Ribeiro
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The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

Aerial photographs reveal the angular geometries of this rooftop swimming pool in Bangkok by Thai landscape architects T.R.O.P. (+ slideshow)

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

The swimming pool is positioned over the podium of a 42-storey residential complex close to the city’s main station. Both residents and passing travellers look down on the pool from above, so T.R.O.P. added a canopy of concrete frames that appear from above to slice the water up into different sections.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

“Most pools in Bangkok […] are called ‘Sky Pool’, because of a location on top of the roof,” said designer Pok Kobkongsanti. “The first couple of ones sounded very exciting, but, after a while, it got boring.”

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

He continued: “To make our pool different than the others, the ‘Skeleton’, a light cladded structure, was proposed to frame the swimming pool three-dimensionally.”

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

The outline of the pool is made up of straight lines with curved edges. The team avoided perpendicular lines where possible and arranged wooden decks and planting areas around the perimeter.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

“Instead of a typical rectangular pool deck, we proposed a series of smaller terraces integrated with the swimming pool,” added Kobkongsanti.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

Low-level lighting lines the edges of the space, creating a welcoming environment for nighttime swimmers.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

Other recent examples of the growing popularity of aerial photography in architecture include a photography series showing bedrooms viewed from above and an image taken from the mezzanine of a recently completed Japanese house.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

See more swimming pools on Dezeen, including a floating cross-shaped pool proposed for New York.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.

Photography is by Wison Tungthunya.

Read on for more details from TROP:


The Pool @ Pyne by Sansiri

Bangkok has changed. So have her people. In the past, we may prefer to live in small houses outside the city areas, and commute in and out the city daily. Not anymore. To fit the present time’s fast life style, New generation keeps moving in many condominiums inside the developed areas instead. Horizontal living is out. Vertical one is the thing to do.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.
Masterplan – click for larger image

As a result, Thai developers are competing hard for the perfect plots of land in town. No, they do not care much about how big the plot is, or how great the view it would get. As long as it is right next to the BTS (Bangkok’s Sky Train) station, it is perfect. In 2010, Trop got a commission to design the Pool of Pyne by Sansiri, a high-end condominium in Bangkok. Its site is ideal. Located right in the middle of busy urban district, just 5 mins walk from the city’s biggest shopping malls, the plot is about the right size, 2,900 sqm. To make it even better, it also has a BTS station right in front of the property.

Architecture-wise, most condominiums in Bangkok are quite similar. The residential tower is built on top of parking structure. Normally the parking part has a bigger floor plan than the tower, leaving the left over area as its swimming pool. The Pool @ Pyne by Sansiri is no different. It is designated to be on the 8th floor, which is also the roof of the parking structure. The area is a rectangular shape terrace, around 370 sqm.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.
Swimming pool plan – click for larger image

Having the train station right in front really helps selling residential units (sold out in 1 day). However, space-wise, the station is a nightmare for designers. It is designed as a huge structure, about a hundred metre long, 3-4 storey high. Basically, it is like placing a huge building right in front of your door steps. Together with other surrounding old buildings, our project is trapped among concrete boxes by all 4 sides.

In order to get rid of that boxy feeling space, our first move is to create a “loosed” floor plan. Instead of a typical rectangular pool deck, we proposed a series of smaller terraces integrated with the swimming pool. Perpendicular lines were avoided, replaced by angled ones with round corners. A series of “green” planters were also inserted here and there, combining all 3 elements, water, terraces and plantings seamlessly.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.
Cross section one – click for larger image

Again, most pools in Bangkok share the same name. They are called “Sky Pool”, because of a location on top of the roof. The first couple of ones sounded very exciting, but, after a while, it got boring. Our design task was not only to design a pretty swimming pool, but we also wanted to created a unique landscape feature that can identify the character of our residents.

To make our pool different than others, the “Skeleton”, a light cladded structure, was proposed to “frame” the swimming pool 3-dimensionally. Before, the so-called sky pool is just flat piece of water on top of the building. Sure, swimmers can enjoy a great prospect view outside, but, looking back to the building, nobody recognise the presence of that pool from below. With the “Skeleton”, the pool was fully integrated into the architecture. Now the BTS passengers can look up and see the special space inside the frame. At night, the “Skeleton” glows, giving the architecture some “lightness” it needs badly in the crowded surrounding.

The Pool at Pyne by T.R.O.P.
Cross section two – click for larger image

Landscape Architects: TROP : terrains + open space
Design Director: Pok Kobkongsanti
Project landscape architects: Theerapong Sanguansripisut, Ekitsara Meedet
Architects: Palmer & Turner (Thailand) Co.,Ltd.
Location: Bangkok, Thailand
Area: 370 sqm
Year: 2010-2013

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by T.R.O.P.
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Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron’s Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron's Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

News: construction is underway on an outdoor bathing lake in Riehen, Switzerland, by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron.

Naturbad Riehen will be filled with natural water without chlorine or chemical additives and is designed to accommodate 2000 bathers per day. As well as the pool for bathers, the Naturbad will incorporate a series of biological water treatment basins embedded in a sloping field on the other side of the road.

Herzog & de Meuron originally won a competition to design a municipal pool for Riehen in 1979, but the scheme was shelved in 1982. The Swiss architects were then commissioned to rethink the concept in 2007, when they abandoned the conventional swimming pool concept in favour of a facility using natural filtration.

The pool is expected to be completed in 2014.

Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron's Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

Last month Herzog & de Meuron was among 12 international firms shortlisted to design a new headquarters for the Nobel Prize in Stockholm, Sweden, while earlier this year they completed three halls for the Messe Basel exhibition centre – see all architecture by Herzog & de Meuron.

Last year we featured a proposal for a skyscraper in Peru with vertiginous swimming pools sticking out of every apartment and a concept for a pool under an inverted dome at an Istanbul primary school – see all swimming pools.

Work starts on Herzog and de Meuron's Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

Above: site plan

Images by Herzog & de Meuron.

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Naturbad Riehen swimming pool
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New Pinterest board: pools

New Pinterest board: pools

As temperatures soared in London earlier this week we all wanted to go for a dip, but none of the local facilities quite matched up to the pools that feature on our latest Pinterest board.

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See all the stories that feature pools on Dezeen »

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Sky Condos by DCPP Arquitectos

Vertiginous swimming pools will cantilever like diving boards from every apartment in this tower proposed for Lima, Peru, by Mexican studio DCPP Arquitectos.

Sky Condos by DCPP

The 20-storey residential building is due to be constructed beside a golf course in the east of the city and will feature a transparent glass facade and a series of elevated courtyards.

Sky Condos by DCPP

The concrete swimming pools will jut out from each of the courtyards and are pictured in the architect’s drawings without any safety rails.

Sky Condos by DCPP

We’ve previously featured proposals for a much taller skyscraper with a projecting swimming pool – see it here.

Sky Condos by DCPP

See all our stories about skyscrapers »

Sky Condos by DCPP

Here’s a project description from DCPP:


Sky Condos Located on a privileged area of the City of Lima and with views towards the golf course, we sought to create an icon for the future, a new luxury housing concept in Latin America; combining the idea of incorporating the exterior space to the interior life of the apartments and creating a new relation between public and private areas.

Sky Condos by DCPP

We wanted to get away from the traditional tower; instead of piling up a series of identical apartments, we created three types that adjust to different necessities; each one with a clear individuality using the privative exterior spaces as our main core.

Sky Condos by DCPP

Ground floor plan

We believe that an apartment shouldn’t lack exterior spaces; this is why our main space in each apartment is the exterior public area which contains the pool and a series of terraces that bring dynamism to the whole tower.

Sky Condos by DCPP

Upper floor plan 1

These terraces fill the apartment with natural light and create a game of lights and shadows.

Sky Condos by DCPP

Upper floor plan 2

The 20 floor tower has a facade that is mainly transparent allowing the integration of the building to the exterior; generating crossed ventilation and natural lighting in all the spaces without sacrificing the privacy inside the apartments.

Sky Condos by DCPP

Upper floor plan 3

The floor plan is open looking for a transparency all along the plot and generating the sensation that the apartments are suspended.

Sky Condos by DCPP

Upper floor plan 4

Sky Condos by DCPP

Upper floor plan 5

Sky Condos by DCPP

Upper floor plan 6

Sky Condos by DCPP

Upper floor plan 7

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DCPP Arquitectos
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Koç Primary School swimming pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture’s proposal for a swimming pool under an inverted dome at a primary school in Istanbul has been shortlisted for an award at this year’s World Architecture Festival, which will take place in Singapore from 3-5 October (+ slideshow).

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

The architects proposed to partially embed the swimming pool in a grassy mound, with a reflective roof structure bulging down to meet it.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

The grassy roof would blend in with the surrounding landscape while the upper dome’s mirrored underside would reflect the greenery.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

Three pools were proposed for inside the dome, while a star-shaped outdoor pool would also be placed alongside the main building.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

The pool was intended to provide a striking entrance to the campus of Koç Primary School, which is run by the Vehbi Koç Foundatıon.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

The swimming pool has been shortlisted for WAF’s World Building of the Year Award but it will not now be built due to the school’s budget constraints.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Considerably distant from the city centre, the Koç School sprawled across its property without a master plan over time and thus was faced with the consequences of this expansion. Envisaged as the focal point of the campus, the pool building is designed as a pacesetter for the quality of future buildings and thus strives to contribute towards the architectural development of the campus.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

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As the first building to be perceived from the new entrance axis of the campus, the building also neighbors the existing outdoor sports areas. In order not to compete with the surrounding buildings in terms of height, the pool building is partly embedded in the ground and is connected to the landscape on all four sides with a green, sloped roof. While the inverted dome attached to the dome structure offers a green tribune area to the outdoor sports areas, it is simultaneously perceived as an art object that strengthens the landscape with its reflective exterior.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

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The design is distinct from the neighboring buildings particularly due to its strong expression. It has been conceived as the first building/object to be perceived upon entering the campus through the new junction at the school’s highway entrance, thus bringing an added value to the overall appearance of the campus.

Project Title: Vehbi Koç Foundatıon Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool
Client: Vehbi Koç Vakfı
Designers: Ecarch with IND [Inter.National.Design] Hasan Çalışlar, Kerem Erginoğlu, Arman Akdoğan, Felix Madrazo, Alvaro Novas, Hans Larsson, Bas van der Horst, Pablo Roquero, Antonio Goya, Miguel Martins
Status: Competition Project / Unbuilt
Location: Tuzla / İstanbul / Turkey
Project Date: 2011

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Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture
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Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

Slideshow: these ridged metal walls enclose the facilities of an outdoor swimming pool that Spanish firm Arquitecturia have just completed in the town of Tortosa.

Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

Located right beside a busy road, the single-storey building folds around the perimeter of the pool to maintain privacy for swimmers.

Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

The building has a concrete frame, which extends beyond the entrance to create an exterior canopy.

Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

Other swimming pools we’ve featured include one inside a ramshackle timber basinsee more here.

Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

Photography is by Pedro Pegenaute.

Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

Here’s some more information from Arquitecturia:


Exterior Swimming Pool and changing room in Tortosa.

The facility is located on the Jesus Road, between the Canal de l’Ebre and the Barranc de la Vall Cervera, and it is accessed from a public space prior to widening of the pavement on this road.

Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

One of the aims of the project is to provide the pools a space removed from the Road and the wind, that overlooks the canal and the future of sports area, as well as to provide a good orientation to optimize its use. As such, the linear structure between the road and the swimming pools sets up as a backdrop that holds the area for outdoor activities.

Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

The boundaries between inside and outside are explored by the structure of concrete and the facade system made of metal profiles. Between these two elements, there ase spaces like porches, patios, shades… areas of ambiguity that dilute and confuse the relationship between inside and outside.

Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

The project is structured around the public space and entrance arcade, with the bar positioned to one side serving as a vantage overlooking the future running track, and the lobby on the other side, drawing the eye to the outdoor pools. The space outside the pools is shaped by a series of shaded areas that connect the three functional units: bar, changing rooms and lobby.

Swimming Pool in Tortosa by Arquitecturia

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