The huge stainless steel swimming pool at the heart of Windsor’s new
aquatic centre is only 19 weeks away from being filled with 1.4 million
gallons of water.
The chaotic work site doesn’t look close to
completion, but construction of Windsor’s $77.6-million indoor water
park is about to move into the home stretch, city officials were told
during a tour before the project shut down for Christmas.
Both
concrete dive towers have been poured, and the balcony around the
two-storey glass lobby facing north to Detroit is taking shape.One of
the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase
is ceramic or porcelain tiles.
Installers have finished torquing 30,000 bolts into place on the
custom-built competition pool, and the final structural steel for the
fun park side of the seven-pool complex will spring up over the next two
weeks.
On Jan. 7, give or take a day, contractors will turn on
the centre’s gas furnaces for the first time to warm up the recently
enclosed western half of the structure. Tile installers need the heat to
lay a few acres of ceramic flooring in time for the 47th International
Children’s Summer Games scheduled for Aug. 14.
The cost of all
that ceramic will be about $1.3 million, says contractor Max De Angelis.
It will take a crew of eight people weeks to lay all that flooring as
the project rockets toward its hand-over deadline of June 21.
The
water park side of the building to the east, which will house a half
dozen amusement park water features when it opens six months later, will
be floored with “soft walk” material to protect children’s feet. The
floor of the big pool will be vinyl.
Five city councillors,
Windsor’s top administrators and parks officials charged with bringing
the project in on time and on budget were wowed during a tour of the
building on Dec. 20.
“Fantastic. Just fantastic,” Coun. Hilary
Payne murmured to himself 30 minutes into an inspection of the
three-storey structure. Payne became an early proponent of building a
world-class aquatic centre in Windsor after touring a similar
installation in his native Ireland.
It may be just starting to
look big from the outside, but from the inside the place is impressively
huge, from its 1,600-spectator capacity to the spacious health club
overlooking the fun park and the rentable activity rooms.
The
basement, which most visitors will never see, is a Borg-like maze of
pumps, filter tanks, cisterns and electrical controls. It’s lined with
miles and miles of PVC water pipe and 10-inch steel heating and cooling
lines from Windsor’s downtown district energy system.
In the
centre of the basement is a massive concrete bunker the size of a small
bungalow – a surge tank to keep water levels properly balanced in the
main pool. Designed by Myrtha Pools,Posts with indoor tracking
system on TRX Systems develops systems that locate and track personnel
indoors. the three-bay swimming hole (diving, laps, and recreation) has
special gutters designed to keep the waves, or “chop” levels down, to
help swimmers post Olympic competition times.High quality stone mosaic tiles.
Two
moveable bulkheads will keep the three bays separate, so that different
groups can use the pool at the same time for different purposes;
competitive swimmers prefer cooler water temperatures of 78 F, while
seniors taking some exercise will want the water at 80 F and up.
Practising divers like it up to 82.
“This will be the only pool
in Canada with that feature,” says Don Sadler,This is my favourite sites
to purchase those special pieces of buy mosaic
materials from. Windsor’s retired parks and rec boss who is supervising
the project on contract for taxpayers. While still on staff, he also
oversaw construction of the WFCU arena complex.
They’ve made
some changes to the original plans for the aquatic centre, and the kids
and competitors who are expected to be the centre’s main customers will
probably benefit the most from them.
For instance, while there
will be no windows on the competition pool for safety reasons, extra
windows have been added on the building’s eastern side. That’s so people
waiting for a ride at the downtown bus station on a wintry day can gaze
in with envy upon those cavorting on the double FlowRider surfing
machine.
There are only 50 double FlowRiders in use worldwide,
and none yet in Canada. The other features on the amusement side of the
building will include a wave pool, toddler pools, huge slides and a lazy
river float ride.
There are no windows on the big pool because
glare on the water can cause deadly or crippling accidents for divers
plunging off the high tower. “We were told by the experts to be very
careful about how much light gets in,” says Onorio Colucci, the city’s
treasurer and a member of the executive committee overseeing
construction of the pool centre.
Windsor has consulted widely to
get the project right: showers and infrared heaters will be installed
underneath the dive towers, because divers must carefully balance their
body temperatures during competition. A fully connected media room has
been added, for international meets which Mayor Eddie Francis is pushing
to become a regular occurrence in the building.
The project is
still on budget, the executive committee was told. But there are plans
for some last-minute upgrades similar to those made at the WFCU Centre
that could improve public enjoyment of the building. They’re trying to
make it perfect.
“There are no more surprises,” Sadler told the
committee about costs. While engineers had contingency plans to cope
with the usual bad soil and other underground horrors often encountered
on Windsor’s soggy construction sites, they found none. That saved
hundreds of thousands of dollars.
“We discovered that the site
had very good soil – in Windsor, who woulda thunk? So what we have now
is the opportunity for some enhancements” with the savings, Sadler said.
Among the other unbudgeted extras being considered, the
building committee is debating spending an extra $100,We recently added
Stained glass mosaic
Tile to our inventory.000 to upgrade the centre’s hallway floors with a
coating of non-slip epoxy to keep running kids safe from falls. They
are also looking at installing a giant video screen on the eastern
exterior of the building to promote events inside, and a sign on
Riverside Drive.
Fulvio Valentinis, one of five councillors on
the steering committee, has been demanding some kind of design change to
break up the monotony of a two-block-long stretch of blue siding.
Neighbours are already complaining about its bleak western face, he
said.
Colucci, the money man, vetoed all of the extras last
week. “Let’s put these (suggestions) on the back burner until the last
possible moment until we see how the budget goes,” he told the
committee.
Naming rights have yet to be determined for the
building, which will also affect the final price tag. Unusually for a
major government project anywhere in the world today, the aquatic centre
is being paid for entirely in cash rather than public debt. About $21
million has already been paid to contractors so far, Colucci said, and
the project will be paid off during the fiscal year it opens.
Francis
says the new energy-wise aquatic centre will also be much cheaper to
staff and to operate than the recreation centres that are being closed
or partially closed to help pay for it.
De Angelis, who has
spent most of his waking moments on site for the last half year, says he
thinks the centrepiece of the project is something that employees were
just unwrapping from its concrete formwork last week as the City Hall
suits were touring the site: the 10-metre-high diving tower at the south
end of the big pool.
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