Yan Kit Swimming Complex
The Yan Kit Swimming Complex (also called the Yan Kit Swimming pool) was the second public swimming pool in Singapore. Located alongside Yan Kit Road, it opened in 1952 and closed in April 2001.[1] The complex cost a total of $513,000 (as of 1952) and pool users had to pay fifteen cents per entry.[2] The complex closed due to a daily attendance of only 120 users by 2001. HistoryOriginally constructed as a filter tank for the Water Department, it was closed down during the Japanese occupation and had its plant removed.[citation needed] Mentions of Yan Kit Swimming Pool first appeared on The Straits Budget in January 1952, where it was reported that the matter of Yan Kit was "still outstanding".[3] It was under construction by September 1952, where it was expected to be opened by November of the same year.[4] It was also expected to cost $400,000.[5] Built by the City Council for $513,000, it was officially opened by then Governor of Singapore John Nicoll and City Council president T.P.F. McNeice on 29 December 1952.[6]
The pool was temporarily closed on 22 June 1953 due to a damaged underground concrete channel.[7] On 17 June 1954 it was announced by the City Architect of Singapore that from July, an experiment would be conducted at Yan Kit to determine if the pool should operate until 9 pm as well as if mixed bathing should take place.[8] In 1994, the National Trades Union Congress Club announced plans to lease the pool and redevelop it part of its new clubhouse at a cost of $6 million, but it never materialised.[9] In April 2001, Singapore Sports Council (SSC) decided to close the pool and return it to the state because attendance had dwindled to an average of 120 daily and it was becoming too expensive to maintain. The foundation of the pools had deteriorated, making spot repairs ineffective. SSC estimated that it would cost S$400,000 to maintain and operate the complex annually and S$4 million to upgrade the entire complex.[10] In a move to give new life to old sports facilities, the SSC announced in 2005 that the complex was opened for possible development by private developers. These plans, too, never materialised. Eventually, in 2011, the site was levelled and grassed in preparation for handover to the Singapore Land Authority. The process will be complete by April 2012.[11] DetailsThe complex, which occupies a 14,859-sq-m plot of land was built on an old railway site off Cantonment Road and contains three pools, a single-storey clubhouse and three other buildings which house toilets and showers. The pools were lined up in a row with diving platforms at one end and a lifeguard watchtower cum slide between two of the pools.[12] It was named after a Canton-born dentist Look Yan Kit who came to Singapore in 1877 and was involved in the founding of the Kwong Wai Shiu Free Hospital in 1910.[2] When it first opened, pool users had to pay 15 cents per entry. According to a former pool supervisor, the complex was so popular that there was only standing room and a two-hour limit was imposed on swimmers. On Tuesdays, the pool was opened only to women and girls who were too shy to appear in their bathing suits in front of men. The pools first supervisor was Lee Hong Ming, who was a founding member of the Singapore Life Guard Corps and had served as pool supervisor at the Mount Emily Swimming Complex. Before Yan Kit Swimming Complex, Singapore only had one other public swimming facility at the Mount Emily Swimming Complex that was built in the 1930s, which has also since been demolished.[12] Notes
Further readingTroubled waters: Yan Kit & River Valley Swimming Complexes. (2006, August–September). The Singapore architect, 142–149. (Call no.: RSING 720.5 SA issue #234) See also |
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