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Building information | |
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Full name | Alster-Schwimmhalle |
City | Hamburg, Germany |
Coordinates | 53°33′36″N 10°01′18″E / 53.56000°N 10.02167°E |
Opened | 20 January 1973 |
Construction cost | DM 36 million |
Architect(s) | Niessen + Störmer, Jörg Schlaich (struct. eng.) |
Main pool | |
Length | 50 m (160 ft) |
Width | 25 m (82 ft) |
Depth | 1.8–5.0 m (5.9–16.4 ft) |
Lanes | 10 |
The Alster-Schwimmhalle is one of Germany's larger aquatics centers, located in the Hamburg district of Hohenfelde. Opened in 1973, it has regularly hosted various national and international swimming competitions.
The Alster-Schwimmhalle is notable for its 102 m (335 ft) by 52 m (171 ft) double hyperbolic-paraboloid concrete-shell roof structure, [1] [2] designed by Jörg Schlaich, then partner at Stuttgart-based engineering firm Leonhardt & Andrä. Resting on three bearings and only 8 cm (3.1 in) thin, the concrete roof remains one the world's largest of its kind. [3] [4] Reminiscent of a butterfly –an allegory to its function as a swimming venue– the airy roof structure earned the Alsterschwimmhalle its nickname as "Schwimmoper" (Aquatic Opera).
The building was substantially renovated in 2007 at a cost of approx 1 mio EUR. A further major renovation is planned for 2020 to 2024 at an expected cost of 60 mio EUR, closing the facility for four years. [5]
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Alsterschwimmhalle at Wikimedia Commons
![]() | |
Building information | |
---|---|
Full name | Alster-Schwimmhalle |
City | Hamburg, Germany |
Coordinates | 53°33′36″N 10°01′18″E / 53.56000°N 10.02167°E |
Opened | 20 January 1973 |
Construction cost | DM 36 million |
Architect(s) | Niessen + Störmer, Jörg Schlaich (struct. eng.) |
Main pool | |
Length | 50 m (160 ft) |
Width | 25 m (82 ft) |
Depth | 1.8–5.0 m (5.9–16.4 ft) |
Lanes | 10 |
The Alster-Schwimmhalle is one of Germany's larger aquatics centers, located in the Hamburg district of Hohenfelde. Opened in 1973, it has regularly hosted various national and international swimming competitions.
The Alster-Schwimmhalle is notable for its 102 m (335 ft) by 52 m (171 ft) double hyperbolic-paraboloid concrete-shell roof structure, [1] [2] designed by Jörg Schlaich, then partner at Stuttgart-based engineering firm Leonhardt & Andrä. Resting on three bearings and only 8 cm (3.1 in) thin, the concrete roof remains one the world's largest of its kind. [3] [4] Reminiscent of a butterfly –an allegory to its function as a swimming venue– the airy roof structure earned the Alsterschwimmhalle its nickname as "Schwimmoper" (Aquatic Opera).
The building was substantially renovated in 2007 at a cost of approx 1 mio EUR. A further major renovation is planned for 2020 to 2024 at an expected cost of 60 mio EUR, closing the facility for four years. [5]
|
{{
cite web}}
: Missing or empty |url=
(
help)
Media related to
Alsterschwimmhalle at Wikimedia Commons