Waterloo Region Record

Kitchener shows off rebuilt Kiwanis pool with splash pad

The pool retains its ‘beach entry’ sloping sides but now has a concrete ‘sand bar’ jutting into its centre

- Catherine Thompson, Record staff

KITCHENER — Bernie Melloul remembers jumping on his bike with his friends and racing down to Kiwanis Park almost 50 years ago for a chance to cool off and enjoy the lazy days of summer.

On Monday, Melloul was one of several dignitarie­s to don a safety vest and hard hat to show off the refurbishe­d pool at the popular park. Melloul is the founder of Melloul-Blamey Constructi­on, the principal contractor on the $4.1-million Kiwanis pool project that city officials showed off Monday at a news conference.

“Like any amenity, it obviously needed a complete overhaul after 50 years,” said Kitchener Mayor Berry Vrbanovic.

“This park truly is a destinatio­n for families, not just in the City of Kitchener, but throughout the region, a place where families can come and get together and cool off ” in the summer heat.

Not everybody in the city is able to escape to a cottage or lake in summer, Vrbanovic said. “This is their summer getaway. It’s so important for all sections of our community to be able to use this park.”

The rebuilding project closed the pool for the 2017 season, and involved the complete refurbishm­ent of the facility. The old concrete basin was ripped out, the chlorinati­on and filtration systems were replaced to meet current health standards and a splash pad for young children has been added.

The pool retains its popular “beach-entry” sloping sides, but its egg shape has been transforme­d into something closer to a C shape, with a concrete sandbar that juts into the centre of the pool.

The sandbar, and the lifeguard chair that sits on it, will give guards greater visibility, said Adam Brodt, supervisor at the pool. “It was always a struggle to communicat­e with people in the middle of the pool,” he said.

The concrete apron surroundin­g the pool now features waves of colour — orange, pink and grey — that meet new accessibil­ity guidelines, since they provide a visual alert to changes in the slope of the concrete.

Another key new feature is the pool’s splash pad, with 14 jets that spray water in arcs, swirls and snaking patterns from flower shapes embedded in the concrete. It’s the eighth splash pad in Kitchener, but the only one with lifeguards, Brodt said.

The splash pad added about $200,000 to the cost of the project, but council decided to include it even though there wasn’t money earmarked for it in the project budget.

More than 2,000 people responded to a city survey about the project, with 85 per cent of them in favour of installing a spray feature for young children.

The city is talking to local businesses that have expressed interest in sponsoring the splash pad or some other feature of the park, said Paul Pickard, who chairs a city committee working on sponsorshi­ps.

Coun. Scott Davey was at the park a month ago when volunteers planted 150 trees. “I was reminded how much people care about parks, and I’m pleased as a councillor that we’re investing in things that matter to people.”

The pool is set to reopen in June 2018, in time for the 50th anniversar­y of the popular facility, which draws about 45,000 people a year from as far away as Toronto.

Updates, background informatio­n and details about the project can be founded at kitchener.ca/kiwanispoo­l.

 ?? DAVID BEBEE, RECORD STAFF ?? City of Kitchener aquatic supervisor­s Jenn Campbell, left, and Kelly Rush look over a guard chair at the Kiwanis pool sneak peek Monday. The pool is undergoing a $4.1 million repair and upgrades and has been closed since April.
DAVID BEBEE, RECORD STAFF City of Kitchener aquatic supervisor­s Jenn Campbell, left, and Kelly Rush look over a guard chair at the Kiwanis pool sneak peek Monday. The pool is undergoing a $4.1 million repair and upgrades and has been closed since April.

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