Concrete falls from ceiling of busy Vancouver pool
CBC
Two large sections inside the Vancouver Aquatic Centre (VAC) are closed to patrons and swimmers after a piece of concrete fell from the ceiling, and a number of acoustic panels were found to be loose.
A statement from the city says the concrete fell in the tot pool area, likely as a result of maintenance being done on the building's exterior.
"The pool was closed while the work was conducted, and during this work a small piece of concrete spalling came loose and landed in the north side of the pool," said the statement, issued jointly by the City of Vancouver's real estate, environment and facilities management (REFM) team and the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation.
"As an additional safety measure, netting has been installed to catch any potential falling debris. While the work was underway earlier this week, the contractor identified there were five to six acoustic panels which had come loose as a result of the work being conducted as well."
The tot pool remains closed, according to the statement, and the eastern deck and end of the main swimming tank have also been closed as a precaution with exterior maintenance taking place on that side of the building.
When it opened in 1974, VAC was a sporting showpiece with a beach location in the densely populated West End. It remains in high demand by swimming, synchro, water polo and diving clubs for training and competitions. It also hosts a slew of recreation programs and swimming lessons.
But at 50 years old, the pool has seen better days.
Two years ago, a three metre by 10 metre section of the outside wall above the entrance doors fell off the building. The collapse, luckily, happened during the night when it was closed.
In 2015, flooding in the mechanical room took out the electrical system.
Longtime swimmer and water polo player Bob Nichols says VAC shutdowns highlight the bigger problem of Vancouver's pool shortage and aging aquatic infrastructure.
"It's unfortunate that we're in a state where when the pool does break down, it affects so many groups and so many people. There's just not a lot of other options in the city," he said.
Swimmer Jarrett Vaughn sat on an aquatics advisory committee created by the Vancouver Park Board. He thinks elected officials have dropped the ball.
"Previous councils and mayors have ignored the huge demand on aquatic facilities in the city, and this is especially worrying since swimming is a basic skill that people who live in a city surrounded by rivers and oceans should really have," he said.
"When you look at how important aquatics is for therapeutic reasons, for physical fitness and for just general safety, you would hope that this would be a priority."
While his party has made a cause célèbre out of its battle with the Speaker, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has periodically waxed poetic about the House of Commons — suggesting that its green upholstery is meant to symbolize the fields of the English countryside where commoners met centuries ago before the signing of the Magna Carta.