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Home > Ocean Baths > North Bondi - Wally Weekes Pool
 

Name: North Bondi - Wally Weekes Pool
(Wally Weekes Bathing Pool)

The first ocean baths south of Sydney Harbour, this modified tidal rock pool borders the North Bondi Children's Baths. Near a popular rock fishing spot.

(Image taken on 19 October 2002.)


click for larger view
Location: Ramsgate Avenue, Bondi, NSW, 2026, Australia
(Latitude South 33d 53m 29s, Longitude East 151d 16m 57s)
Waverley > Sydney - Eastern Suburbs
Access to toilet/change facilities
Actively maintained
Disabled Access
Men
Women
Children
 
Current Use: Ocean baths.
Condition: Good.

Early 1900s
Original pool was a swimming spot created by residents.

Later formalised and named after Wally Weekes, a publican, boxer and patron of the North Bondi surf club.

1998
Waverley Council commissioned an investigation report on the North Bondi Children's Pool from the NSW Department of Public Services. The report recommended construction of a new intake line through the Wally Weekes Bathing Pool and the existing rock shelf.

2001
Waverley Council commissioned a further report on the North Bondi Children's Pool and a review of the Wally Weekes Pool from Patterson Britton & Partners Pty Ltd, an engineering firm with considerable experience and expertise in the design and upgrading of ocean pools. That report made few recommendations for the Wally Weekes Pool, but did recommend that Council add a handrail at the ramp entry to the pool and continue to leave the discharge valve open to allow the pool to operate fully as a tidal pool. The pool's water quality was considered satisfactory.

Waverley Council approved a tender for upgrading of the Wally Weekes Bathing Pool and the North Bondi Children's Pool, subject to confirmation of available funding.  

Bondi was the home, fishing and swimming place for the Cadigal people. Aboriginal rock carvings at the Bondi Golf Course, Ben Buckler Reserve and the coastal walk at Mackenzie's Point are protected by State legislation.

1889
The Bondi Ocean outfalls sewage system was completed with an ocean outfall at the northern headland known as Ben Buckler.

1899
The Australian Museum first collected stone tools shaped like a scalpel or penknife blade and made thousands of years earlier from the northern end of the beach. Some of these tools, along with other stone implements and artefacts (grindstone, nose ornaments, scrapers, spear points, etc.) and the remnants of an Aboriginal midden containing shellfish debris are now buried under Bondi's Queen Elizabeth Drive.

Early 20th century
Although Sydney's Bondi Beach is only a kilometre long, the Bondi and North Bondi communities developed their own surf clubs and ocean baths.

1981
In February, surf pollution at Bondi was found to be 1,000 times above the acceptable level.

1990s
Extension of the Bondi Ocean outfalls system reduced surf pollution.
 

To be added.
The original early 1900s pool was a swimming spot created by residents. Later formalised and named after a local identity.

Assessed significance: Local.
Current heritage status: To be advised.
 

Related Topics
Working bees & voluntary labour
Studies & References
National Trust listing

EJE Landscape Architects & Christa Ludlow.
Survey of Harbourside & Ocean Pools of the Sydney Metropolitan Region.
Prepared for the National Trust of Australia (NSW), 1994.

 
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