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The George B. Fitch Warrenton Aquatic and Recreation Facility, commonly acronymized as The WARF, is a town-owned recreation center and accompanying park in Warrenton, Virginia. [1] The Town of Warrenton Parks and Recreation Department is situated within the facility.
SplashDown Waterpark, a waterpark located within Ben Lomond Regional Park in Sudley, Virginia (near Manassas), is operated by the Prince William County Department of Parks and Recreation. [1] The park was built at the location of the Ben Lomond swimming pool, opening in May 1996.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends swimming lessons for children from 1–4, along with other precautionary measures to prevent drowning. [4] In 2010, the American Academy of Pediatrics reversed its previous position in which it had disapproved of lessons before age 4, indicating that the evidence no longer supported an advisory against early swimming lessons.
The Weyerhaeuser King County Aquatic Center is an aquatic facility in Federal Way, Washington constructed for the 1990 Goodwill Games. It has hosted US Olympic Diving Team Trials in 2000 and 2012 , [ 2 ] NCAA championships, PAC-12 conference championships, USA Swimming Winter National championships and Speedo Junior National championships. [ 2 ]
CISAC is home to the Ginninderra Swim Club, with over 100 people training there daily during mornings and during the evenings. Safety improvements were made at the pool complex after a two-year-old boy drowned in 2005. [1] Later in March 2013 CISAC recorded a death of a two-year-old girl after visiting a swimming pool.
It is named for Jean Freeman, the university's long-time women's swimming coach. [1] The main competition pool is named after Dorothy L. Sheppard, a multi-sport athlete for the University in the 1920s and a donor to the Aquatics Center and a benefactor of women's sports at the university. [2] [3]
The National Aquatic Centre is one of the world's largest indoor water centres. [citation needed] It comprises: a 10-lane 50-metre x 25-metre international-standard swimming pool with two moveable floors which allow it to be reconfigured for other uses; a 25-metre international standard diving and warm-up pool; seating for 2,500 spectators;
The City Centre Aquatic Complex is an indoor aquatic centre featuring an Olympic size swimming pool in the Town Centre area of Coquitlam, British Columbia. The building was designed by Vic Davies Architect Ltd., built at a cost of $8.2 million, and opened in March 1994. The pools use ozone for secondary water purification.