Peter Hemingway (Coronation) Pool
This award-winning pool was built as a Centennial project, and is located in Coronation Park.
This award-winning pool was built as a Centennial project, and is located in Coronation Park.
Designed by Peter Hemingway in 1967, this Olympic-sized pool was unlike anything ever seen in Edmonton. The design was inspired by the Expressive Modernism movement and the National Gymnasium and Pool in Tokyo, Japan. Originally named the Coronation Swimming Pool for the park in which it resides, the facility opened on July 3, 1970 at a total cost of $1.2 million. In 2005, the pool was renamed after Hemingway to commemorate and honour his work in the capital region.
Made of wood, concrete, steel, cables and glass, the structure brings the outside in and connects the building with the surrounding landscape. The design features curtain wall glazing for a high level of transparency while the heavy timer and embedded concrete piers tie the cable structure to the ground. The building shape is reminiscent of the crest of a wave or the rolling landscape of Alberta mountains and prairies. For his unique design, Hemingway won the Massey Medal for Architecture, the highest honour in the country for architecture.
Details
Type
Social and Recreational
Designation Status
No Historic Recognition
Neighbourhood
TBD
Time Period
Year Built
1970
Architects
Architectural Styles
Character Defining Elements
Curtain wall , Heavy timber construction , Metal structure , Rectangular footprint , Tensile cables