Laugardalslaug

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coordinates64°8′45″N 21°52′49″W / 64.14583°N 21.88028°W / 64.14583; -21.88028
(Street address: Sundlaugarvegur 30, 105 Reykjavík)
Owner
City of Reykjavík
Pool sizesOutdoor: 50 m × 22 m (164 ft × 72 ft)
Indoor: 50 m × 25 m (164 ft × 82 ft)
Laugardalslaug
Interactive map of Laugardalslaug
AddressReykjavík, Iceland
Coordinates64°8′45″N 21°52′49″W / 64.14583°N 21.88028°W / 64.14583; -21.88028
(Street address: Sundlaugarvegur 30, 105 Reykjavík)
Owner
City of Reykjavík
Pool sizesOutdoor: 50 m × 22 m (164 ft × 72 ft)
Indoor: 50 m × 25 m (164 ft × 82 ft)
Construction
Built1958–1968
(expanded 1981–1986 and 2002–2005)
Opened1 June 1968
Architect
Website
https://reykjavik.is/stadir/laugardalslaug

Laugardalslaug (Icelandic pronunciation: [ˈlœyːɣarˌtalsˌlœyːx], "pool of Laugardalur") is a public thermal baths and swimming pool complex located in the Laugardalur district of Iceland's capital Reykjavík. With an indoor Olympic-size swimming pool, a 50-metre-long outdoor swimming pool, a 400 m2 playing pool, 8 hot pots of various temperatures, and a 17 m2 steam bath, it is the largest conventional swimming pool complex in Iceland. Receiving about 800,000 visitors in 2010,[1] it is the most visited thermal baths in Iceland after the Blue Lagoon.

The baths are owned by the City of Reykjavík, and are operated by its Department of Sport and Leisure (ÍTR; Íþrótta- og tómstundasvið Reykjavíkur [is].)[2]

The complex was constructed at its current location in 1958–1968, designed by city architect Einar Sveinsson,[3] and was expanded in 1981–1986[4][5] by architect Jes Einar Þorsteinsson,[6] and again in 2002–2005.[7][8]

The hot springs of Laugardalur were mentioned by Þorkell Arngrímsson Vídalín [is] in 1672.[9][10] The springs were visited by Uno von Troil, Archbishop of Uppsala, on his journey to Iceland in 1772. He measured the water temperature at 89.4 °C.[11][10]

Pools

Pool[3]TemperatureSurfaceVolumeLengthWidthDepthLanesOpened
Indoor pool 28 °C 1,250 m2 2,500 m3 50 m 25 m 2 m 10 2005
Outdoor pool 28 °C 1,100 m2 1,000 m3 50 m 22 m 0.80–1.76 m 8 1968
Children's pool 29 °C 400 m2 320 m3 0.80 m 1968
Hot pot
Iðulaug
39 °C 30 m2 17 m3 1986
Seawater pot 39 °C 20 m2 15 m3 2007
Indoor hot pot 39 °C 9 m2 7 m3 2005
Hot pot 1 40 °C 7 m2 5.6 m3 1968
Hot pot 2 38 °C 7 m2 5.6 m3 1968
Hot pot 3 42 °C 7 m2 5.6 m3 1968
Hot pot 4 44 °C 7 m2 5.6 m3 1968
Wading pool
Diskur
32 °C 30 m2 3 m3 0.40 m 1968
Cold pot 6–8 °C 2 m2 2 m3

Photos

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI