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Name: Port Kembla Olympic Pool
Not a classic rock baths but a magnificent saltwater 'pool on the hill'. Water comes up to these baths in a pipe and no waves splash
over the side.
Set upon the hill at the north end of Port Kembla's
magnificent South Beach, this is a lido-style seawater pool, catering
for swimmers and sunbakers. A swimming experience more comparable with
the North Sydney Olympic Pool than with the Merewether Ocean Baths.
(Image taken 15 April 2003.) |

click for larger view |
Location: Olympic Boulevard, Port Kembla, NSW,
2505, Australia
(Latitude South 34d 29m 33s, Longitude East 150d 54m 3s)
Wollongong >
Illawarra |
 
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1934
Central Illawarra Shire granted 4,000 pounds for pool construction at a site
chosen after consultation with the Town Planning Association of NSW.
1935 to 1937
Horse teams worked on the pool construction. The levelling-off of the site and
excavation work for the baths and construction of the approaches were carried
out as an unemployment relief project and award wages were paid for the
remaining work.
1937
The dazzling art-deco Olympic pool was ready for opening and had cost 16,590
pounds. There was a tiled wading pool 60 feet wide by 300 feet long with a depth
ranging from 1.5
feet to 2.5 feet . The main tiled Olympic pool built to NSW Amateur
Swimming Association standards was 165 feet (55 metres) long and 60 foot wide, with
a depth ranging from 3.5 feet to six feet at the edge of the diving zone and deepening to 12 feet
for the diving zone and then reducing to four feet to provide starting facilities for
backstroke races. It had seven racing lanes, a five-metre diving tower, an
eight-metre diving tower as well as a one-metre
springboard and a three-metre springboard all to Olympic standard and 32 underwater floodlights.
The Illawarra Tourist Zone Committee co-operated with arrangements for the
opening of the Port Kembla Baths. For the weekend of the pool's opening, Port
Kembla was decorated with flags and bunting. Eric Spooner, the NSW Minister for
Public Works and Local Government, opened the pool in the presence of the
Shire President, councillors, the shire
clerk and deputy clerk of Central
Illawarra Shire, the President of the Local Government Association and the
Mayor of Bathurst. The Port
Kembla Carnival Committee, the Port Kembla Town Band, the Steelworks Band, the Illawarra
Branch of the Surf Life Saving Association, the Illawarra Tourist and Publicity
Bureau, Metal Manufactures, Australian Fertilisers Ltd, the Electrolytic
Refining and Smelting Co. of Australia Ltd, and the NSW Amateur Swimming
Association were thanked for their contributions to the festivities.
The pool rated 'equal to any in Australia' was considered a tribute to the skill of
Shire Engineer, Mr B. C. Griffith, the electrical engineer and their workmen. The
baths were seen by the local Member of State Parliament (W. Davies M.L.A.) as a means of producing
swimming champions and a healthier community and providing a stillwater facility
where the NSW Education Department could arrange for every child to learn 'the
necessary skill' of swimming.
The NSW Amateur Swimming Association diving troupe performed dives from the two highest towers in
formation. Clowns performed in bathing costumes labelled 'Spooner Specials'
lampooning the Minister who had become best-known for mandating a swimming costume that kept
men's chests covered.
Swimming events organised by the Wollongong Amateur Swimming Club included races
for men, schoolboys, diggers, old buffers and old and present scouts as well as
ladies and girls. Some five thousand people, probably the 'biggest crowd ever
witnessed in Port Kembla' watched the opening, many from no-cost vantage points
on the hill overlooking
the Baths.
Central Illawarra Shire Council gave the South Kembla Surf Lifesaving Club permission to sell icecreams
and drinks at the baths pending appointment of a permanent caretaker and accepted
the surf club's offer to patrol the baths on weekends. A
Port Kembla Amateur Swimming Club formed with the new pool as home base, but
decided not to affiliate with the NSW ASA until the next season.
The new pool was a tourist attraction. Along with Central Illawarra Shire Council, the Port Kembla Traders Association, and the two local surf clubs, the
swimming club organised a carnival to entertain thousands of visitors arriving
by special train on a Railway Touring Club excursion. The Shire President
donated trophies for champion male and female swimmers resident in Central
Illawarra Shire. Some 3,000 people gathered around the baths for the carnival
offering swimming races for men and boys, ladies and girls, and exhibitions by
champion NSW swimmers including 'an imitation of a butterfly'.
1938
The Port Kembla Ratepayers Association asked that a laundry be erected at the
baths. While in NSW this seems an odd combination of functions, many
examples of public bath-houses combined with public wash-houses existed in
Britain.
Port Kembla Amateur Swimming Club provided six members to act as inspectors at the baths and
requested they be issued with inspectors' badges. The club also planned a swimming carnival
with half the proceeds to go to the Central Illawarra Shire Council.
Despite the admission charge, the Baths were popular. In the fortnight ending 15
January 1938, cash takings at
the Baths amounted to nearly 80 pounds, as several thousand people had visited
the baths and passouts
(for the purpose of surfing) had to be issued. In the fortnight ending 12 February,
the Baths takings amounted to 38 pounds and ten shillings, while the two weeks to 26
February yielded takings of 33 pounds, 16 shillings and fivepence.
1939
A channel was cut into the rock to improve drainage of sand near
the outlet valves. Council's Baths Committee recommended adding spikes to deter
people climbing over the wall near the entrance steps, providing a club room
locker and adding hat and coat racks to the men's changing-rooms and the west
wall of the sun-room.
Night swimming was limited to three evenings a week from 19 March until the season
ended on 30 April 1939.
The Boy Scouts Association held its 1939 district swimming carnival for scouts
from Austinmer, Balgownie, Berry, Port Kembla and Wollongong at the Port Kembla
Olympic Baths. The Port Kembla Swimming Club and the Boy Scouts Association
organised the day as a picnic swimming afternoon for scouts, cubs and rovers.
The Port Kembla Amateur Swimming Club offered Sunday morning
swimming lessons at the baths. The Club's carnival included competitors from the Wollongong
Amateur Swimming Club and generated 23 pounds, 11 shillings in revenue.
1940
The Port Kembla Olympic pool proved very popular with locals, with 6,519 people
attending in the first two weeks of January. A 1940 carnival at Port Kembla
included a record breaking 100 metre swim by Empire and Olympic games swimmer, Evelyn
de Lacy, and competitors from the Wollongong Amateur Swimming Club. The carnival
attracted a crowd of some 870 persons and raised 27 pounds, ten shillings and
eleven pence to be jointly shared between the Port Kembla
Amateur Swimming Club
and the Central Illawarra Shire Council. Mr W Davies MLA said the baths were 'one of the finest in the
state', the club had made 'magnificent progress' and that he hoped Central Illawarra
Shire would build the 'vitally necessary club rooms'. He regarded swimming baths
as 'essential to everyone in the state from a point of physical fitness as well
as pleasure'.
Eighty members of the 2nd AIF from the Ingleburn camp visited the pool for
inspection in February. As a gesture to the AIF, Council decided to open the
baths free during morning physical training period to ex-AIF men on garrison
duty.
1942
After the pool opened on 3 October, some 1,200 people visited the baths in two
days of very hot weather, but numbers dropped as the weather cooled. As the
baths were still showing a loss every year, Council's Baths Committee was asked to
review admission charges.
1943
The pool was particularly popular in December, thanks to efforts by the Baths
manager.
Council gave the baths inspectors the power to prosecute regarding straying dogs.
1944
A government grant funded the NSW Amateur Swimming Association learn-to-swim campaign which aimed at
teaching as many people as possible in the State to swim and which offered
instruction at Port Kembla in February.
A Boy Scouts district swimming carnival attracted some 200 cubs, scouts and
rovers to the baths.
1945
Efforts were made to organise a Sunday bus service to the Port Kembla Baths by
the next summer swimming season ''for the public who would attend the baths if
the service was provided'.
After World War II
As thousands of migrants from Europe came to work in Port Kembla's steelworks,
the pool became an increasingly important part of Port Kembla culture. For
post-war migrants working at the steelworks and new to Wollongong and to Australia,
this pool was a very attractive social and recreational space.
1996 & 1997
Extended swimming season trials in 1996 and 1997 resulted in Port Kembla
reverting back to its traditional season.
With the cost of rebuilding the pool estimated at $3.25 million, Wollongong City
Council set aside $1 million and agreed to hold back on projects in other areas,
so the work on the pool could start in 1998.
1998
Wollongong City Council closed the rundown pool for $4.3 million of renovation
work.
2000
The replacement pool opened for use on the same hour of the same day as the
original 1937 pool.
The new pool contains a modern beach entry, a wading pool, a 15-metre learning pool,
as well as the Olympic pool, toilets, showers, dressing-shed, lifeguard
observation tower, disabled access and meeting rooms. It was highly commended in the design and
construction category of the Institute of Public Works Engineering Australia
Excellence Awards.
Because the new pool hadn't opened until 20 February, the pool was kept open for a
6-week extension to the normal season as requested.
There is no charge to swim at this pool.
2003
The pool hosted the 500-metre swim leg of the Illawarra Triathlon Club's final summer
race.
Maintenance problems at the pool included cracked tiles which fell off, concrete
corrosion on the concourse surrounding the pool and discolouration. Wollongong
Lord Mayor, Alex Darling, said Council would ensure the repair costs did not fall
on ratepayers and that the community had a first-class facility.
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Port Kembla is some 85 km south of Sydney. Extensive deposits of Aboriginal shell middens in the
dunes at MM beach testify to extended use of the area.
Nineteenth century
Known by the settlers as
Illawarra Farm, the Five Islands or Red Point.
A military garrison and stockade relocated from Red Point in
Port Kembla to the boat harbour at Wollongong in 1829. In 1897, the NSW Public Works Department selected
Port Kembla as the most suitable deep-water port for shipping coal from the Illawarra coalmines.
1907
The Electrolytic Refining and Smelting Company of Australia Ltd (ER&S) copper
refinery and smelter set up at Port Kembla in 1907 to process the ores from Mt
Lyell in Tasmania.
1916
Metal Manufacturers Pty Ltd (a manufacturing company
established by Australia copper producer Mt Morgan and Mt Lyell and its English
partners British Insulated and Helsby Cables) set up in Port Kembla. MM
activities included a wire factory, a telephone cable factory and tube factory.
MM became a
major consumer of the ER&S refined copper. MM gave its name to the beach
in front of its workshop and next
door to the Port Kembla steelworks.
1947
Central Illawarra Shire, North Illawarra and Bulli Shire were
amalgamated with the municipality of Wollongong in 1947 to form the City of
Greater Wollongong.
In the 1950s
Measurements of air pollution taken by the NSW Department of Public Health
indicated Port Kembla was one of the most polluted areas in the Southern
Hemisphere. Air quality has greatly improved since the 1950s.
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The 1937 Port Kembla Olympic pool was one of the state's most magnificent saltwater pools and the only
saltwater pool outside Sydney comparable with the North Sydney Olympic Pool. Not a classic ocean baths, but representative
of the Olympic-standard ocean baths and saltwater pools.
Opened the year after the Berlin Olympics, it demonstrated government and
community commitment to the provision of Olympic-standard swimming facilities.
The 2000 version of the pool is also magnificent. Its high aesthetic significance
reflects the pool's siting as well as the design of the pool and its associated
buildings. Important as a recreational and social facility for several generations of the Port Kembla community and associated with Port Kembla's
swimming club, surf clubs, residents and visitors as well as local businesses.
Assessed significance: Cannot be assessed as an ocean baths.
Current heritage status: N/A as an ocean baths.
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Next pool south = Shellharbour - Beverley Whitfield
Pool Next pool north = Port Kembla - Fishermens
Beach Rock Pool>
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