Pools
Pool Inspiration: Villa 95’s Z-Shaped Oasis
Pool inspiration achieved. The Z-shaped geometry of this design concept provides the perfect canvas for the ultimate luxury at-home oasis.
Looking for pool inspiration? The enchanting landscape of Cádiz, Spain is the perfect backdrop for Villa 95, emerging as a masterpiece of contemporary architecture. The unique pool and outdoor living design is captivating professionals with its exquisite aesthetic. Crafted by the visionary team at Fran Silvestre Arquitectos, this unique design showcases the seamless integration of modern living with the surrounding natural beauty.
The inspiring essence of Villa 95 lies in its expressive Z-shaped three-story structure, a continuous movement that beckons residents to embark on a journey of exploration through its various rooms. The unique zig-zag design is eloquently summarized by the architects themselves, stating, “The expressive nature of this three-story house is designed in a continuous movement that suggests, between its different rooms, a walkway from where to explore the landscape that expands in front of it.”

One of the most distinctive features of Villa 95 is its exterior morphology, strategically arranged to maximize the utilization of its plot. The architectural elements, resembling a long diagonal arrangement, appear to connect only at their vertexes. However, within this seemingly disjointed exterior lies an intricate internal network of interconnected spaces, fostering constant communication between different parts of the residence.
The upper floor of Villa 95 unfolds to reveal a sprawling balcony, serving as both the roof of the middle section and an expansive vantage point. The limits of this elevated space extend in two directions, reaching outwards to embrace the lure of a smartly appointed outdoor living area and stretching inwards to the confines of the plot, seamlessly blending with the upper level of the house.
What sets Villa 95 apart is its tertiary configuration and the uninterrupted succession of spaces, inviting the observer to follow the playful figure that defines its shape. This almost whimsical yet sophisticated geometry not only creates a visually captivating aesthetic but also establishes the distinct identity of the house.

6 Reasons Why This Pool Design Is Inspiring
1. Aesthetic Harmony with Landscape:
Villa 95’s design seamlessly integrates with the surrounding landscape of Cádiz. The pools, strategically positioned to overlook different parts of the property, contribute to the aesthetic harmony between the built environment and the natural surroundings.
2. Innovative Use of Elevation:
The placement of the vanishing edge pools at different juxtaposing elevations is a stroke of genius. This not only adds an element of drama and visual interest but also showcases a keen understanding of topography. We’re inspired by the elevation play, as it challenges the conventional flat pool design, demonstrating how thoughtful consideration of different levels can elevate the overall pool experience.

3. Architectural Integration:
Villa 95’s Z-shape geometry and the integration of multiple pools within the structure are a showcase of the successful fusion of architecture and aquatic design. It’s inspiring to see architects treat pools not just as mere accessories but as integral components of the overall design. This approach encourages them to think beyond the pool as a standalone feature and consider it as an integral part of the larger architectural canvas.
4. Spatial Flow and Connectivity:
The uninterrupted succession of spaces and the continuous movement of the design create a sense of spatial flow. It’s easy to appreciate the interconnectedness of the different areas, as it suggests a holistic approach to outdoor living. Today’s leading designers are exploring methods that promote connectivity between various poolside spaces and the broader architectural context, this project is a perfect example of how this has come into play.

5. Distinctive Identity:
Villa 95’s playful yet sophisticated geometry gives the property a distinctive identity. The inspired design showcased how pools located throughout the entire property can contribute significantly to the overall character of a residence. This design concept truly embraces the concept of making the entire home an oasis.
6. Luxurious Panoramic Views:
The strategic placement of the vanishing edge pools offer breathtaking panoramic views of the landscape. Today’s homeowners are drawn to the idea of swimming pools that not only serve as recreational spaces but also as vantage points, providing residents with a luxurious visual experience. This focus on the overall experience inspires one to consider pools as immersive elements within the broader living environment.
Photo Credits: Fran Silvestre Arquitectos
Pool News
The Current State of the Backyard Pool Industry: Short Film Holds Up a Mirror
The film that asks the question… is family togetherness worth the price of summer’s most expensive luxury?
At first glance, The Current State of the Backyard Pool Industry sounds less like a short film and more like something you’d see on the agenda at an industry summit. It reads like a white paper. A market report. An economic forecast delivered in a ballroom with bad coffee and PowerPoint slides.
That’s intentional.
Because the film isn’t just about a backyard pool. It’s about everything surrounding it right now — inflation, supply chain issues, pricing anxiety, dwindling usage, and the uneasy dance between homeowners and contractors trying to justify what something costs these days.
Film Title Anything But a Misnomer
The short film from Derek Frey, David Amadio, Gil Damon, and Steve Kuzmick opens in territory that ought to immediately feel familiar to anyone working in the pool industry: a dated backyard pool. The liner is aging. The water looks neglected. The chemistry is questionable. And the homeowner is staring at a renovation estimate he isn’t sure he can justify — financially or emotionally.
From that setup, the film does something clever. It takes the headlines we’ve been writing about here at Pool Magazine — rising costs, logistical breakdowns, economic pressures — and drops them into an everyday backyard conversation. Then it asks a harder question:
When the cost of maintaining the pool goes up… what happens to the meaning of it?

Film Shows The Realities of Rising Costs
In the opening scene, a homeowner, Henry (played by Gil Damon), asks his pool guy, Rick (played by Steve Kuzmick), why his pool liner replacement now carries a five-figure price tag.
The character Rick cites inflation. Supply chain instability. A late winter freeze in Texas. Petrochemical plant shutdowns. Limited liner availability.
If you’ve read Pool Magazine over the past few years, you’d already know that at least a few of those stories have already been validated in print. They’re real. They happened. They created issues that affected contractors nationwide.
That’s what makes the scene land.
Because Rick isn’t inventing stories. He’s pulling from real-life industry issues. But the way he delivers his points — confidently, rapidly, with the cadence of someone who has well rehearsed his rebuttal — creates more than a sliver of doubt.
Is he educating the homeowner? Or is he stacking headlines into a persuasive narrative that smacks with the slick gold chain energy of a used car salesman?
“The whole Texas freeze thing came from research,” David Amadio explains. “We were trying to connect the plight of this one contractor to a larger industry issue. The audience doesn’t know if it’s real. They don’t know if it’s legit. It could just be a ruse.”
That ambiguity is the point. The film doesn’t accuse the industry of exaggeration. It simply shows how real economic forces can easily blur into sales language.
The inflation and Texas freeze references aren’t throwaway lines. They were well researched.
Art Sometimes Imitates Life
“When you first reached out to us for an interview, I went on the Pool Magazine website, and one of the top headlines was about another Texas freeze,” director Derek Frey says. “I was like, wow. I don’t know if that’s art imitating life or not, but that was particularly intentional in our crafting of this story.”

That realness doesn’t just live in the headlines, pool guy Rick cites — it lives in how he carries himself.
Kuzmick’s performance isn’t built only on what he says but on the physicality of how he delivers his lines. After making his case for why Henry’s liner replacement will be more expensive, he wraps the conversation with a firm slap on his customer’s back and a casual, “Talk it over with the family and let me know.”
Then he walks.
He doesn’t linger, and he sure doesn’t soften the number. The message is subtle but unmistakable: I’ve got other jobs. I’m busy, and you need me more than I need you.
A View From The Other Side of the Mirror
Henry, the homeowner, is just as recognizable as Rick — only from the other side of the estimate.
He’s the Everyman. The middle-aged dad staring at a liner replacement bill that costs far more than he expected and wondering how he’s going to explain it at the dinner table. There’s a touch of Clark Griswold in him — earnest, well-intentioned, slightly overwhelmed. You get the sense that if something can go wrong with his pool, it probably will. When his skimmer pole snaps in half on the first attempt to clean, it’s funny — but it’s also revealing. This is a man losing control of something he once felt confident about.
The real pressure, though, is about the conversation waiting for him inside the house.
Henry knows the liner replacement isn’t just a repair. It’s a negotiation. One where he has to justify the expense to his wife — and he already senses she won’t be on board. In today’s economy, a five-figure liner replacement isn’t a casual conversation. It’s sure to be a debate and a potential source of tension.
That’s where the film pivots from industry commentary to something more personal, and a conversation happening in many homes across the nation.

The hesitation isn’t just about money. It’s about relevance.
Fighting a Losing Battle Against Devices & Indifference
Henry tries to make his case by appealing to what the pool used to represent — long summers, family time, shared memories. But when he looks to his kids for reinforcement to help him make the case, he’s met with indifference. Phones in hand, half-hearted answers, distracted nods. The pool that once anchored family life now competes against their screen time.
“It’s like a fantasy of middle-class American fatherhood,” David Amadio says. “All of us are watching our kids grow older by the day. All these pastimes we loved are falling by the wayside. This movie was our attempt to try to hold onto those things for a little bit longer.”
Gil Damon, who plays Henry — and who actually owns the pool used in the movie — brings an authenticity to that quiet frustration.
The Film Introduces a Thought Provoking Question
“Whether the kids swim in it or not, you still have to maintain it,” Damon says. “If you don’t maintain it, something goes terribly wrong. And there’s still something kind of joyous in maintaining it. Even just skimming the leaves. But at some point you’re like, wait, what am I doing all this for?”
That question lingers in the film.
What are we maintaining?
The pool becomes a metaphor for something bigger — for rituals that once felt permanent but now feel optional. For investments that once made obvious sense but now require defense. For a version of family life that doesn’t compete well with Wi-Fi.
Competing Against Technology
“Technology is king,” Amadio says. “There are so many casualties in the culture of technology. The pool’s like a little antidote to that. It’s an analog getaway from the digital maelstrom in which we all live.”
In that context, the liner replacement isn’t just a repair. It’s a referendum. Not just on budget, but on whether the pool still holds meaning inside the household. Henry’s wife finally says she would just as soon as like to fill in the pool and be done with it altogether.
And it’s right when Henry seems ready to give up — when he shuts off the timer and retreats inside — that the film introduces its wild card.
Reigniting That First Spark
Henry awakens to the sound of splashing. The pool lights are on. The water, which hours earlier looked neglected and uninspiring, now appears clean, inviting, almost cinematic. Floating across the surface is a stranger in goggles, a swim cap, and striped bathing suit, casually doing the backstroke.
He introduces himself as Willy Chamieux — played by writer David Amadio — and calmly explains that he is “the manifestation of why pools are cool.”

Henry, understandably alarmed, tells him the pool is in no condition to swim in (even though it’s clearly been transformed) and orders him out, a command which Willy ignores.
Instead, he dives beneath the surface to “inspect” the torn liner Henry was complaining about. When he resurfaces, it’s face down in a dead man’s float. Henry panics and jumps in to save him — only to discover he’s been played.
Getting Memory to Break Down The Barriers
And that’s the turning point. The moment Henry slips into the water, all of the tension drains from him. The defensiveness, the budgeting, the quiet resentment we saw earlier — it all fades. There’s something about being back in his pool — not as a project, not as an expense, but as he always imagined it — that softens him. You can see it on his face. He’s not calculating anymore. He’s remembering.

Willy challenges him to a game. They dive for quarters. They laugh — the kind of unguarded laughter that hasn’t been heard in that backyard in a while.
Soon, the rest of the family drifts outside. They’re tackled into the pool by Willy and quickly fall under the same spell as Henry, experiencing the renovated condition and joy of once more being in their own pool. The tone of the film shifts again. Visually, the sequence leans into classic aquatic spectacle.
“That was the main reference,” Derek Frey says. “Those 1930s films choreographed by Busby Berkeley — Footlight Parade — and Olympic synchronized swimming. We storyboarded the movement based on many of those references.”

The overhead shots evoke old Hollywood water ballets. The pool center stage again once more in the lives of Henry and his family.

Analysis of Willy Chamieux
The character of Willy carries an apparition-like quality throughout that the film never explains outright.
“We don’t know if he’s a water sprite or an actual person,” David Amadio adds playfully. “He kind of straddles the line.”
That ambiguity is deliberate.
Willy clearly isn’t there to fix the pool; the illusion disappears the moment he does. Rick will still need to be called if that dream is ever to become a reality. No, Willy is merely there to remind.
To remind Henry what the pool once felt like, reconnecting the emotion to the investment.
To remind the family of what enjoying the pool together once meant.
There’s something unmistakably Dickensian about the structure. Willy feels like a warm-weather variation of A Christmas Carol — less chains and underdone potato, more chlorine and cannonballs. If Scrooge needed the Ghost of Christmas Past to remember who he once was, Henry needs something similar.
Willy may very well be the Ghost of Summers Past.
The film never spells it out, but the parallels are there, and we pointed some of them out to the filmmakers. The character Henry represents a man on the brink of abandoning something meaningful. A supernatural visitation. A night that changes perspective before it’s too late.
“We hadn’t thought about Dickens specifically,” David Amadio admits, “but it’s definitely there.”
Whether spirit, trickster, or simply shared DNA, Willy’s function is clear: he forces Henry to re-experience joy before he walks away from it.
And then comes the final turn.
Coming Full Circle
Henry wakes the following morning, not on the couch where he had resigned himself to defeat, but in bed — surrounded by his family. The energy is different. The tension is gone. His wife looks at him and gives a quiet, approving nod. No speech is necessary. No debate. They both know what comes next.
His first order of business will be to call Rick and approve the liner replacement.
The film doesn’t frame that moment as one of defeat or capitulation, but one of clarity.
Only then does the final reveal land.
As day breaks, Rick pulls up in a truck and Willy climbs in. They head off toward another address — another backyard, another hesitant homeowner, another family on the fence. The magic wasn’t random but part of the process.
There’s a faint echo here of The Swimmer — one almost immediately draws the comparison of Burt Lancaster moving from pool to pool. Only this time, the journey is one of restoration. Willy isn’t drifting through suburbia trying to outrun a sad reality. He’s moving through it, reminding families what once made their backyards matter. It’s a subtle but meaningful reframing.
Rather than positioning Rick as a manipulator, the filmmakers present something more layered and nuanced. Rick understands that homeowners don’t just need pricing estimates. They need perspective.
“I think they’re ultimately doing good for people,” Derek Frey says. “Rick is pure business. He’s about the sale. Willy is doing it for the reasons he outlined. Everybody kind of comes out a winner.”
Together, they’re not just repairing pools — they’re restoring connection.
And that’s where the film’s theme settles.
The current state of the backyard pool industry isn’t simply about tariffs, inflation, or any of the other litany of issues impacting the industry. It’s about relevance and reminding consumers why they opted to build a pool in the first place.
Screening The Current State of the Backyard Pool Industry
For pool professionals, the takeaway isn’t that they need a gimmick.
It’s remembering what it is that they’re really selling.
The film doesn’t pretend that the economics aren’t real. The cost increases are real. The supply chain strain was real. The sticker shock homeowners feel is real. Those conversations happen every day in the backyard.
But so does the other part — the part that’s harder to quantify.
The first cannonball of the season.
The late-night sessions of Marco Polo.
The laughter that carries from backyard to backyard all summer long.
Rick understands the business of that, but Willy understands the magic.
And that’s why the film resonates.
Screening this film could be a useful exercise for pool professionals across the industry — not as satire, not as critique, but as perspective. It invites a simple question: Are we leading with cost, or are we leading with value?
We may not all have a magical spirit like Willy to bring along on every job to convince the customer.
Which means the magic has to come through us. Because if we don’t remind them why it matters, no one else will.
Ready to take a deeper dive?
Listen to our entire interview with the filmmakers of The Current State of the Backyard Pool Industry on the Pool Magazine Podcast.
Photo Credits: Derek Frey Films
Pool News
This Summer, A Pool Floats in NYC: Update on + POOL Project
When + POOL first captured global attention, it did so with a deceptively simple idea: New York City is surrounded by water—why can’t New Yorkers swim in it?
Years later, that question has evolved into one of the most ambitious waterfront projects in the country. In a recent interview with Pool Magazine, Kara Meyer, Managing Director of + POOL, provided a comprehensive update on the project’s progress, regulatory breakthroughs, construction milestones, and long-term vision for reconnecting New Yorkers with their waterways.
What began as an artist-driven concept is now mid-construction.
From Concept to Movement
Meyer traces + POOL’s origins to a group of architects and artists who observed the paradox of New York’s geography. “New York City’s surrounded by water and we can’t access it for swimming,” she explained. “What if we could, instead of cleaning the entire river, carve out a small piece of it?”

The early vision proposed a plus-shaped, floating pool that would filter river water directly through its walls—cleaning the water while creating a safe, contained swimming environment. The concept resonated globally. “It was really just a concept in its early design phases that just captured the imagination of the world,” Meyer said. “People all around the world were like, yes, this is awesome, this is great.”
But inspiration alone doesn’t build infrastructure. To move the idea forward, the founders created a nonprofit organization to serve as the development arm of the project.

A Mission Bigger Than a Pool
Over time, + POOL evolved from a singular design concept into a mission-driven organization focused on access, education, and stewardship.
The nonprofit was founded “with a mission to provide free and safe access to urban waters for swimming, to educate the public on the issues affecting our water quality, and to promote water stewardship and water safety education,” Meyer said.
While the iconic plus shape remains central to the brand, Meyer emphasized that the organization’s purpose extends far beyond geometry. “Plus Pool is an organization, right? But it’s also a community of people that are driving that organization and driving the idea forward,” she noted.
The brand was intentionally designed to be “inclusive and celebratory and positive and, quite literally, a plus—to the waterfront, to New Yorkers’ quality of life.”

Building the Pilot: Why the First Pool Is Different
Today, construction is underway on the first + POOL installation—a pilot facility designed to operate within a newly created regulatory framework.
“We are currently building the first + POOL, which is a pilot facility that we are developing against new regulations that we’ve ignited to even allow for this kind of innovation to exist,” Meyer explained.

Because no regulatory pathway previously existed for a floating, river-fed public pool, + POOL had to work with state and city health departments to shape new policy. After that framework was established, the project received capital funding from the Governor of New York to pilot the facility.
Rather than constructing the full plus-shaped configuration immediately, the team is building one “arm” of the plus—a lounge pool portion—to demonstrate operations, safety, and regulatory compliance.
“We took one arm of the plus to do that with that funding,” Meyer said. The intent is to allow city and state officials to understand how such a facility “would be permitted, would be regulated, would operate” before expanding further.
How the + POOL Filtration System Works
What distinguishes + POOL from traditional pools is its direct relationship with the East River.
“The difference between a traditional swimming pool is that the pool is being fed with the East River water,” Meyer said.
Rather than drawing from municipal water sources, the pool pulls water directly from the river. Filtration equipment—housed within a customized barge structure—treats the water on-site. Meyer describes the structure as a vessel: “If you think of the pool as a boat… the filtration equipment lives in the hull of that boat.”
The system continuously pulls in river water, filters it, and discharges clean water back into the river. Notably, the pilot pool will not rely on chlorine as a disinfectant. “The idea is that you’re really having a natural swimming experience in the natural waters,” Meyer explained.
Water turnover rates are significantly faster than those of traditional pools, ensuring safety while leveraging an effectively endless surrounding water source.
The result is both a recreational facility and an environmental intervention. “It’s actually filtering and cleaning the water while you’re swimming in it,” she said.
Regulatory Hurdles and Policy Breakthroughs
For nearly a decade, regulatory barriers represented the project’s biggest obstacle.
“There was no process,” Meyer stated plainly. Existing health codes recognized only two categories: pools and beaches. A floating, river-fed filtration pool fit neither.
In addition, many areas of the East River were not classified as “bathing” waters under state environmental regulations, prohibiting the construction of swimming facilities.
Through data collection, policy advocacy, and collaboration with agencies, + POOL helped establish new regulatory pathways. The updated framework allows for waivers and demonstrations of safety compliance, even in proximity to combined sewage overflow (CSO) systems—an issue common to many older cities.
“This has been kind of an interesting case study… in how you can really innovate alongside government in a way that will shift the needle,” Meyer reflected.

Funding a Public Vision
From its inception, + POOL adopted a public-benefit model inspired by projects like the High Line. Meyer explained that the nonprofit structure was chosen to ensure the pool would be equitable and accessible—not a members-only amenity.
“We wanted to make sure that was equitable and accessible to all and not reserved for… a members-only type private facility,” she said.
The project has relied heavily on private donations, volunteer expertise, and pro bono services to sustain operations and programming. Ultimately, state capital funding unlocked the ability to construct the pilot installation.
The public-private partnership model is designed to demonstrate feasibility so that future investments—public or private—can scale similar projects.

Construction Timeline: What Happens Next
As of early 2026, the floating barge structure has been constructed, and the team is preparing to install the pool liner, piping, and filtration systems.
“We’re mid construction,” Meyer said.
The plan is to float the operational structure into the river this summer to demonstrate full-scale operations to health officials. After testing and regulatory review, the team hopes to complete above-deck amenities—including decking, railings, bathrooms, showers, and locker rooms—and officially open to the public in summer 2027.
Education and Community Programs
Even before the physical pool is complete, + POOL has invested deeply in community programming.
Recognizing that many New Yorkers lack access to swim education, the organization launched a Learn to Swim program focused on low-income youth. “Data really has shown that low-income New Yorkers are the least likely to have the ability to take swim lessons or learn to swim,” Meyer noted.
To date, the program has served more than 1,500 youth across the city, later expanding to adult learners.
In parallel, + POOL has developed STEM curricula and public data initiatives to demystify water quality. From classroom instruction to interactive dashboards—and even a floating light sculpture that changes color based on real-time water conditions—the organization has worked to make water science accessible.
“We’ve really taken a role in making sure that people understand what is safe about their water,” Meyer said.
Reconnecting a City to Its Water With + POOL
At its core, + POOL represents a cultural shift.
New York has spent decades revitalizing its waterfronts—adding parks, bike paths, and boat launches. Meyer sees + POOL as the next step: not just bringing people to the water’s edge, but into the water itself.
“We’re taking that kind of waterfront revitalization one step further and getting people into the water,” she said.
Success, in her view, isn’t just a single floating pool. It’s a new regulatory landscape, additional urban swim facilities, and a generation of residents who see their waterways not as barriers—but as assets.
New York City boasts more than 520 miles of waterfront, yet only 14 miles of beaches. “We have lots of untapped potential,” Meyer observed.
If all goes according to plan, by summer 2027 a floating pilot pool will mark the first tangible realization of a vision that began as a sketch—and a question.
What if you could swim in the East River?
Thanks to years of advocacy, engineering, and persistence, New Yorkers are closer than ever to making that dream a reality.
On a More Personal Note
At Pool Magazine, we support the + POOL initiative. Over the years, we’ve watched this project evolve from an inspired concept into a policy-shifting movement—fueled not by a single entity, but by a coalition of passionate grassroots supporters, designers, engineers, educators, legislators, and advocates who refused to let the idea fade.

Now, as the first incarnation of + POOL moves from blueprint to floating reality, it represents more than a public swim facility for New Yorkers. It represents the power of community-driven progress and a reimagining of how cities can reconnect people with their natural resources.
We’re proud to have been supporters from the beginning—and we’re excited to see this landmark public works project finally coming to fruition.
Photo Credits: + POOL – http://pluspool.com/
Ready to Take a Deeper Dive?
Listen to our entire conversation with Kara Meyer, Managing Director of + POOL on the Pool Magazine Podcast.
Pool News
LA28 to Transform SoFi Stadium Into Record-Breaking Olympic Swim Venue
LA28 is poised to transform SoFi Stadium into a record-breaking Olympic swimming venue. When the Games return to Los Angeles in 2028, swimming will take place inside one of the most technologically advanced stadiums in the world.
SoFi Stadium, home to the Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Chargers, will be converted into what is projected to be the largest swimming venue in Olympic history. Organizers anticipate accommodating more than 40,000 spectators — nearly double the 22,209 attendance record set at the U.S. Olympic Trials.
The decision marks a significant departure from traditional Olympic aquatic venues and reflects LA28’s broader strategy of maximizing existing infrastructure rather than constructing permanent new facilities.
For nine days during the Games, SoFi’s football field will transform into a world-class aquatic competition complex.
From Opening Ceremony to Olympic Pool
Before swimming competition begins, SoFi Stadium will co-host the Olympic Opening Ceremony alongside the LA Memorial Coliseum in a dual-venue celebration. The stadium will also host the Paralympic Opening Ceremony.
To accommodate the ceremony, organizers plan to build a removable stage over the swimming pool installation area — a design made possible by the stadium’s adaptable architecture.
Otto Benedict, Senior Vice President of Facility Operations at SoFi Stadium, emphasized that flexibility was embedded in the venue’s original concept.
“The design process and the design thought through the SoFi Stadium was always to be one that was very convertible. It allows us to do many different things,” Benedict said.
Following the ceremony, the stage will be removed, revealing the competition pools beneath and allowing the transition into swimming events scheduled for the second week of the Games.
The scale of the conversion is unprecedented.
The entire playing surface will be utilized.
“It’s going to go sideline to sideline. We will take up the entire expanse of our football field, so all 101,000 square feet will be utilized for the competition area. So it will truly look like something you’ve never seen,” Benedict said.
By the time the first swimmers step onto the blocks, the same field that hosts NFL games and international soccer will have become the largest swimming venue in Olympic history.

A Stadium Built for Global Events
SoFi Stadium is widely recognized as one of the most advanced sports and entertainment venues in the world. Opened in 2020, the Inglewood facility has already hosted Super Bowl LVI in 2022 and is scheduled to host multiple matches during the 2026 FIFA World Cup. It will also host Super Bowl LXI in 2027 — just one year before the Olympics.
By 2028, the stadium will have served as a global stage for football, soccer, and major entertainment events. Olympic swimming will add an exciting new dimension.
Juan Carrero, Vice President of Operations at SoFi Stadium, acknowledged both the opportunity and responsibility.
“It’s a huge pride to be part of the Olympics, but also a great responsibility, as the eyes of the world will be here at SoFi Stadium,” Carrero said.
The conversion will require temporarily removing the football playing surface and installing at least two 50-meter pools — one for competition and one for warm-up — inside the stadium bowl.
Engineering an Olympic Pool Inside a Football Venue
Olympic competition pools must meet strict standards set by World Aquatics.
Each pool measures 50 meters long and 25 meters wide, with depths typically at or above three meters to reduce wave reflection and turbulence. A single Olympic pool holds more than 600,000 gallons of water.
Beyond size, precision is critical.
Wall alignment, lane widths, bulkhead positioning, and starting block anchoring must be exact. Touchpad timing systems depend on perfectly vertical end walls. Overflow gutter systems must dissipate surface waves to maintain optimal racing conditions.
Installing that level of precision inside a stadium designed for turf rather than water introduces additional considerations, including:
• Structural load management on the stadium floor
• Integration of advanced filtration and circulation systems
• Humidity and air temperature control in a stadium-scale environment
• Broadcast lighting calibration across the water surface
• Evaporation management with more than 40,000 spectators present
The environmental demands differ significantly from those of a traditional aquatic center.
The pools used for LA28 will be engineered to world-record standards — despite being temporary installations.

Modular Pool Systems Expected for LA28
LA28 organizers have not yet publicly detailed the final pool supplier for the 2028 Games. However, recent Olympic competitions have relied on modular stainless-steel pool systems specifically designed for temporary installation inside multipurpose venues.
At the 2024 Summer Olympics, organizers converted the Paris La Défense Arena into a world-class swimming venue by installing two temporary 50-meter pools in just 36 days. The rapid transformation demonstrated how modern modular systems can turn non-aquatic arenas into precision-engineered competition environments under compressed timelines.
These systems differ significantly from traditional cast-in-place concrete construction.
Rather than forming a permanent shell, modular competition pools are assembled using precision-manufactured stainless-steel panels installed on site. A reinforced membrane lines the basin, and structural bracing ensures dimensional rigidity across every lane.
The approach offers several advantages for a stadium conversion such as SoFi Stadium:
• Accelerated installation and removal schedules
• Millimeter-level dimensional tolerances
• Controlled structural loading within existing buildings
• Reusability after the Games
Temporary Olympic pools are engineered to the same standards as permanent facilities. In fact, multiple world records in recent Games have been set in modular stainless systems installed inside multipurpose arenas.
Given the scale of SoFi Stadium and the scheduling sequence — including the co-hosted Opening Ceremony and the transition to swimming in week two — modular construction represents a proven model for delivering elite performance within a temporary configuration.
As planning continues and contracts are finalized, Pool Magazine will provide in-depth coverage of the engineering, installation process, and technical specifications behind the LA28 competition pools.
LA28 Targeting Record-Breaking Attendance
Swimming is consistently one of the most watched Olympic sports. By placing competition inside SoFi Stadium, LA28 is positioning the event to shatter attendance records.
Officials anticipate accommodating more than 40,000 spectators — far surpassing the 22,209 fans who attended the U.S. Olympic Trials, the current benchmark for a swimming event.
The scheduling adjustment that moves swimming to the second week of the Games makes the conversion feasible. SoFi will first co-host the Opening Ceremony, then transition to aquatics configuration before competition begins.
The scale of the venue introduces new environmental variables. Humidity control, air handling, and lighting must operate efficiently across a far larger volume than traditional natatoriums. While swimmers are unaffected by crowd noise once racing begins, the overall event atmosphere will more closely resemble a championship football game than a conventional swim meet.

Diving at the Rose Bowl Aquatics Center
While swimming will take place in Inglewood, Olympic diving events will be staged at the Rose Bowl Aquatics Center, following confirmation from LA28 and the City of Los Angeles.
The Rose Bowl Aquatics Center, located adjacent to the historic Rose Bowl Stadium, will undergo temporary seating enhancements to accommodate Olympic spectators. The venue already meets many of the technical requirements for elite diving competition.
Diving pools require depths typically exceeding five meters and incorporate specialized aeration systems that create surface agitation to protect athletes entering the water from platform heights.
Separating swimming and diving venues allows organizers to match each sport with a facility suited to its competitive demands — large-scale stadium seating for swimming and a controlled aquatic environment for diving.
A Modern Olympic Model
The use of SoFi Stadium reflects a shift in Olympic planning philosophy.
Previous host cities invested heavily in permanent aquatic structures. The 2008 Summer Olympics delivered the National Aquatics Center, while the 2012 Summer Olympics constructed a purpose-built aquatics venue designed for long-term use.
LA28 is emphasizing adaptability and infrastructure reuse.
By leveraging an existing global-caliber stadium and installing modular pools that can later be removed, organizers aim to reduce long-term construction costs while still delivering a world-class competitive environment.
For the aquatics industry, LA28 highlights the continued evolution of modular stainless-steel systems in high-performance environments. What was once considered a temporary solution has become the standard for many of the world’s most visible competitions.
Looking Ahead
The next several years will serve as preparation for SoFi Stadium’s Olympic role. Hosting the 2026 FIFA World Cup and Super Bowl LXI in 2027 will provide operational experience managing large-scale international audiences before the Games arrive in 2028.
When Olympic swimming begins, spectators will see a world-class aquatic venue assembled inside one of the most recognizable stadiums in the United States.
What will be less visible is the engineering precision beneath the surface — stainless panels aligned to exact tolerances, gutter systems tuned for wave suppression, and environmental controls calibrated for stadium-scale performance.
For nine days, the football field in Inglewood will become an Olympic pool.
And in 2028, it will be the largest stage swimming has ever seen.
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