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A New Pool: better living through bulldozing

Mrs. Coach | Profile
July 28, 2008

There are no words more beautiful in a swim-coach family than these: a new pool.

Imbued with the sweet scent of hope that only a UV air-purification system can deliver and able to erase the memory of unidentifiable rashes like a diatomaceous-earth filter, a new pool is a harbinger of better things to come in any swim-coach family.

The swim-coach family will say to themselves, "This is going to be the year that Daddy finally kicks the Singulair habit." Or maybe they’ll say, "This is the year that the guys from the local OSHA office stop calling and asking if there’s anything they can do to help." Or perhaps, "This is the year that the microbiology class stops leaving petri dishes out to collect mold samples from the pool air." Bottom line, a new pool is cause for much rejoicing.

And now Mrs. Coach’s family stands metaphorically perched on the metaphorical starting block of a literal new pool. Way back when Mr. Coach was hired, the university’s game plan had been to build a new pool in 3 to 5 years. Then economic reality hit and, like a seven-year-old in the 25-yard butterfly, the plans for a new pool have plummeted, surfaced and plummeted many times.

But this past year, somebody taught that seven-year-old how to get his hips into it and he finally touched the wall with both hands and the umpteen million dollars needed to get that pool built. Mrs. Coach’s reaction when Mr. Coach told her (for the umpteenth time) that the new pool would get built? "I’ll believe it when I see it," she said. (Mrs. Coach is a little bitter about the Singulair bills.)

But earlier this summer, she began to see it. The architect’s plans were unveiled and a name for the new facility was announced. Trees were slaughtered and earth has been getting bulldozed around the new natatorium’s site, destroying the delicate micro-ecosystems where furry groundhogs have shuffled and snuffled for centuries and migrating songbirds have stopped to refresh themselves on thistle seeds and honeysuckle nectar. Soon, the lives of a half-dozen innocent tennis courts will be snuffed out. And Mrs. Coach couldn’t be happier. In fact, she’s thinking of throwing a party to celebrate this senseless carnage of nature and non-revenue-generating sports.

And while Mr. Coach works diligently to explain to the powers-that-be why starting blocks and lane lines are must-haves on his start-up costs list, Mrs. Coach is assembling her own list of must-haves: cushioned, ergonomically-correct seats in the stands (with cupholders), a timing-system control console that you don’t need an engineering degree to understand (for those times when the work-study students don’t show up and Mrs. Coach has to help operate the timing system), refrigerated drink dispensers in the coach’s office, and a wood-fired pizza oven would be nice, too.

She would further request that the new facility get the rights to play a different version of the national anthem before meets, the version that she knows Mr. Coach really wants to play: the Jimi Hendrix guitar solo – but it needs to be the studio version, not the live one from Woodstock. No one can accuse Mrs. Coach of being insensitive.



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Greg posted August 3, 2008 at 9:17am.
Nine lanes is a pretty standard configuration - check out trials, check out the Olympics. Nine is fine
  
Chris DeSantis posted July 31, 2008 at 7:00pm.
Yeah now I just feel like an ass complaining about our possible 8 or 9 lane 50 meter pool. Its all relative though. That facility would just put us on par with half the teams in our league.
  
Jeff posted July 31, 2008 at 11:58am.
I can't tell you how many times I've swum in downtown YMCA's that were built pre WW2 that had 4 lanes that were 5 ft wide turned into 7 lap lanes and no lane lines. When I get to a 6 lane pool with lane lines I feel spoiled. I just chuckle to myself and understand their desire for a bigger pool even though we all know that this is the best it'll get or eventually it'll get turned into something else. At least it's a pool I can go to and feel good in. I hope you get all the lanes you're looking for.
  
Mrs. Coach posted July 31, 2008 at 11:35am.
Our first rendering had us down for 6 lanes and 25 meters!

Well, if you get 9 lanes, maybe you could take two outside lanes, turn them into three very narrow lanes, and put your 6'3", 145-lb. freshmen in them?
  
Chris DeSantis posted July 30, 2008 at 9:20pm.
Experiencing a similar phenomenon here at Penn. We have a beautiful artists rendering of a pool sitting on the office that four of us share. Earliest date of completion? 2015. Oh, and the rendering has us slated for a 9 lane, fifty meter pool. 9 lanes?!?
  
Mrs. Coach posted July 28, 2008 at 8:01pm.
If that's a 4-lane pool, I will cry for you! Even if it isn't, I'll cry for you. Our current pool is a spring chicken compared to yours at only 54 years old! GOOD LUCK!
  
Merrill Overturf posted July 28, 2008 at 9:16am.
Congratulations! We are trying to build a pool here as well. Folks look at me like I have a foot growing out of one of my ears when I tell them why we need to do this and quit swimming at the local Y that was built in the 1940s.
  
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