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The Shape of Water

By Jim Tranquada

What holds 598,000 gallons, contains 15 lanes, and has a capacity of 188 people? (Hint: It鈥檚 not your grandfather鈥檚 pool.)

When team captain Zander Granath 鈥20, a sociology major from Salt Lake City, led SA国际传媒 swimmers through a rapid-fire rendition of 鈥淚o Triumphe鈥 at Taylor Pool before the Jan. 11 Pomona-Pitzer meet, no one paid any particular attention. It was a pre-meet ritual that had occurred hundreds of times before at Taylor, which turns 90 in November. Things were looking up: The sun was out, with temperatures in the high 50s; the sometimes balky scoreboard and timing system were both working; and parents from as far away as Washington state were in the stands to cheer the Tigers on.

In the back of everyone鈥檚 mind, however, was the promise of a new era on the other side of Taylor鈥檚 graceful red tile-topped arcade: the new De Mandel Aquatics Center, the new pool just a few city inspections away from opening for business. After literally decades of anticipation, this could have been the very last 鈥淚o Triumphe鈥 at the last meet in Taylor Pool, one of the oldest active outdoor pools in the NCAA.

鈥淚鈥檓 really grateful I got to swim in this pool,鈥 Granath said between races as towels draped over the arcade鈥檚 iron railing dried in the sun. 鈥淲e鈥檝e produced national champions in this pool. It鈥檚 fun to compete against a Chapman or a Pomona and beat them in a meet here. But at the same time I鈥檓 envious of the first-years who will get to enjoy most of their career in the new pool.鈥

Cindy Dong 鈥22, a media arts and culture major from Sarasota, Fla., manages the swim team鈥檚 Instagram account and has been responding to a constant stream of messages asking when the new pool will be ready. 鈥淥f course, we鈥檙e all looking forward to it,鈥 says last year鈥檚 SCIAC champion in the 200 fly. 鈥淭he first time I saw it filled with water it was like, wow, this is really happening.鈥

Earlier that morning, before the meet began, as many as eight swimmers were jammed into a single lane to warm up. The new pool has a different kind of problem, if you can call it that: It has 15 lanes, but the scoreboard can only accommodate 12.

鈥淚t鈥檚 gorgeous. It鈥檚 beautiful. All of us can鈥檛 wait,鈥 Jack Stabenfeldt 鈥14, men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 water polo coach, says at his desk in the Payton Jordan Athletic Offices. While there has been frustration about the delays in opening, which has been pushed back multiple times, 鈥淭he bottom line is that the new pool will make swim and water polo more competitive.鈥

Some of the delays were unavoidable, including 40 days lost to rain during construction, says Tom Polansky, associate vice president of facilities. Others were due to the complexities of building a pool on a sloping site and dealing with inspectors from multiple city and county departments. 鈥淏ut when the crew you bring in to plaster the pool tells you how beautiful the pool is compared to the other jobs they鈥檝e worked on, that helps put it all in perspective,鈥 Polansky says.

After winning the women鈥檚 1,000-meter free at the Pomona-Pitzer meet, Siena Lucido 鈥22, a cognitive science/group language major from San Pedro, ran through a list of some of the ways the new pool will make a difference. Its 15 lanes mean the team will no longer have to practice in shifts. Team divers who now have to practice and compete in Pasadena will be able to come home for the first time in decades.

鈥淚t鈥檚 looking really nice,鈥 Lucido said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e excited to finally get in.鈥

As a sprinter, Granath said he is excited about the new pool鈥檚 starting blocks鈥斺渢hose will be huge鈥濃攁nd the faster times that will come with a bigger, deeper pool. 鈥淲e will be able to do so much more,鈥 he said, adding wistfully: 鈥淚 really am a little bit jealous.鈥

Not far away, All-SCIAC swimmer Laura Chun 鈥19, a history major from Arcadia, was cheering on her friends and former teammates. 鈥淚t would have been nice if we had been able to use the new pool when I was swimming, but it鈥檚 OK鈥擨 loved my experience here,鈥 said Chun, whose father, Ron Chun 鈥87, also swam for SA国际传媒 in Taylor Pool.

After De Mandel opens, current plans call for Taylor to be filled in and the arcaded E.S. Field Building that surrounds it to be restored. The resulting Cannon Plaza will be used as a multipurpose event space.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a lovely pool. It鈥檚 a piece of classic California architecture,鈥 said Ann Rendahl of Tacoma, Wash., who has two sons on the swim team鈥攋unior Sam Sachs and first-year Nate Sachs. 鈥淚鈥檓 glad they鈥檙e not going to tear all of it down, given all the history and meaning it has for the College. But the new pool will be much better.鈥