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Counsilman-Hunsaker
Phone: 314.894.1245


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10733 Sunset Office Dr.
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St. Louis, MO 63127

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 Download Swim Slowly, School's Open in .PDF format

Swim Slowly, School's Open

by: Gus Arzner

Featured in Aquatics International May/June 1997

Would doubling the size of your planned high school pool, hiring a full-time aquatics director, and forming a partnership with your city parks and recreation department to operate the new aquatics center still make sense three years later?

The community of Crawfordsville, IN, believes it does. In fact, most residents say the aquatics center is the øbest thing that ever happenedÓ to the town of 13,500 people, located 45 miles west of Indianapolis, IN.

When Gail Pebworth took over coaching duties for the Sugar Creek Swim Club team in 1974, few people realized that her success with a small group of kids would lead to the construction of a multi-million dollar aquatics center.

By 1983, the Crawfordsville School Corp. knew that its 70-year-old downtown school building was rapidly deteriorating and needed to be replaced. Pebworth had been using Wabash College's 25-yard pool on a daily basis, and began lobbying for the inclusion of a similar pool in the plans for the new school.

Pebworth soon realized that while a 25-yard pool would meet the school's needs, the community would still be underserved. She and a number of other citizens pressed the school board to enlarge the planned pool to a 50-meter design.

With backing from community industrial leaders and aquatics personnel, the Crawfordsville High School plan was approved with a 50-meter, 600,000-gallon aquatics center across from the main gymnasium. Architects Counsilman Hunsaker were selected to design the aquatic center.

Pool Leadership

The school superintendent, city mayor, parks and recreation director and Sugar Creek Swim Club board president all agreed that effective leadership of the Crawfordsville Aquatics Center would require the addition of a full-time aquatics director.

The board nominated me for the position based on my previous experience as the community aquatics director of Albany, OR, where I had opened a similar 50-meter pool. In the fall of 1993, I moved my family to Indiana and prepared to open the aquatics center. Tony Ressino would serve as assistant aquatics director.

Crawfordsville's modest population became a major obstacle in finding qualified personnel to form the aquatics staff. Luckily, there were several untapped resources close at hand.

The high school swim team became the nucleus of the lifeguard staff along with several Wabash College students who served as evening and weekend head lifeguards.

Ressino assumed the duties of staff training along with teaching high school swim classes. Several ex-Sugar Creek Swim Club members, now married and living in the community, became American Red Cross (ARC)-certified water safety instructors and began an after-school community lesson program.

Parks and recreation department summer water aerobics instructors certified by the Aquatic Exercise Association were hired to teach morning, evening and weekend classes. Soon a water therapy class was added and taught by a staff member who was certified by the Arthritis Foundation. In time, a senior exercise class was offered along with water walking classes.

Aquatics Curriculum

By February 1994, a water proofing program began with all second-through-fifth graders from the five community elementary schools each receiving 10 class periods of swimming instruction. Two elementary school physical education teachers assist with these programs.

Middle school instruction followed, with all sixth- and seventh-graders receiving 15 class periods of instruction. The middle school swimming curriculum was developed using the ARC Basic Water Safety and Emergency Water Safety materials as guides. I teach this course with assistance from the middle school's two P.E. teachers.

Ressino's high school swimming classes certify all freshman students in ARC CPR, and an ARC lifeguarding course is offered each semester to prepare students for summer jogs at surrounding pools and lakes.

Meeting the needs of the school system didn't stop with the students. In a short time all school staff members - teachers, custodians, cooks and their families - received free use of the aquatics center during the pool's recreational swimming hours. 

My staff also works closely with the parks and recreation department during the summer months when Ressino and I supervise the city's 50-meter outdoor pool. All summer scheduling of activities and programs for the city pool is coordinated through the Crawfordsville Aquatics Center offices.

The aquatics center pool is used approximately 10 hours a day, 351 days a year. While Crawfordsville High gets more use out of its pool than most schools, it also has to deal with higher operation costs.

Annual operation of the pool is budgeted at $200,000. The city of Crawfordsville is committed to an annual $55,000 subsidy, and the pool itself raises $70,000 in user fees and equipment rentals. The balance is paid by the Crawfordsville School Corp.

The planning process to replace the original high school took years of school committee and community meetings, all with the focus of meeting the students' needs in the 21st century. Luckily for Crawfordsville, a few forward-thinking individuals ensured that the whole community could benefit from the aquatic opportunities offered to its students.

The Crawfordsville Aquatic Center

At-a-Glance

Eight-lane, 50-meter indoor pool with an 8-lane, 25-yard cross course. A connected 2- to 3-feet-deep shallow pool allows for instruction of young children and easy access by the handicapped or elderly.

Pool type: concrete shell lined with 1-inch ceramic tile.

Volume: 600,000 gallons

Depth: up to 7 feet, with a 14-foot diving well.

Sanitation: four Tanpure Industrial TPU5-2 / 4 liquid sanitizers with an LMIB121-71S hypochlorinator feeder controlled by a Stranco 790 controller. Chlorine levels are maintained at 1.2 to 1.5 parts per million.

Pool equipment and features:

  • One 3-meter and two 1-meter maxi-flex diving boards and Durafirm diving board stands by Duraflex International Corp.
  • Filtration system consists of two PACO bronze15 hp, 800 gallons per minute (gpm) centrifugal pumps and two 800 gpm high-rate Neptune Benson sand filters.
  • Stranco control system adjusts CO2 levels to maintain a pool pH of 7.4 to 7.5. Muriatic acid controls alkalinity levels at 90 parts per million.
  • Climatemaster dehumidification air handling units maintain 45 to 50 percent humidity and 85 F air temperature. Air-handling unit control is provided by a Johnson Controls Zone Terminal microprocessor.
  • Natatorium space heating and cooling is provided by two Recovery 500 systems. Dehumidifying coils and compressor superheaters maintain 83 to 84 F water temperature, with gas reheat.

- G.A.

Gus Arzner is aquatics director for the Crawfordsville School Corp., Crawfordsville, IN.