Gravity-defying swimming pool hangs over 24-story ledge with transparent glass floor
By Eric Pfeiffer, Yahoo! News | The Sideshow – Fri, Aug 10, 2012
The Holiday Inn's cantilever pool (InterContinental Hotels Group)A
hotel in China offers guests a spectacular and unique view, as they
swim in a pool with a glass floor while dangling 24 stories above the
busy Shanghai streets.
The Holiday Inn Shanghai Pudong Kangqiao's
swimming pool is what's known as a cantilever pool, in which part of
the pool extends beyond the ledges of the building. The cantilever
engineering allows the pool to extend over the edge of the hotel's wall
while being anchored only at one end. The engineering concept has been
used on numerous objects, from bridges to farmhouses. Even the airplane
on the bottom right of the image above uses cantilever engineering. But
you don't see very many examples of this structural design being applied
to swimming pools. Particularly not ones with a glass bottom way above a
busy metropolitan street.
CNN
reports that the extended bridge gives swimmers the sense that they are
traveling through the air, all while pedestrians can view them from
below.
"We wanted to provide our guests a
unique swimming experience, and let them feel they're vacationing even
in a bustling city," a spokesperson for InterContinental Hotels Group,
parent company of Holiday Inn, told CNN.
Holiday Inn says it sought input
from a number of professional designers and even aerospace experts
before beginning construction.
You can view a photo of the pool—which is about 98 feet long, 20 feet wide and 5 feet deep—from inside the hotel.
To use the pool, you have to be a
guest of the hotel or a member of its gym. But if you happen to be in
the area, rooms at the hotel start at $125 per night, compared with the
$2,400 annual gym membership.
There are other cantilever pools
around the world, though most are located in residential properties and
not so high up in the air. This is the first such pool built for
commercial purposes in China, and was designed by the Singaporean firm
Chan Sau Yan Associates.
The Atlantic has a gallery of other gravity-defying pools.
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