Reconstruction begins on
Richmond’s largest and oldest pool
By Aqueila M. Lewis
Over 100
Richmond community members witnessed a historical
wall-breaking ceremony at the Richmond Municipal
Natatorium, affectionately known as the “Plunge,” on
Monday to celebrate the long-awaited start
of construction.

Construction
workers began by punching a hole in the west
wall to allow demolition equipment to begin taking
down the concrete block interior partitions.

In the early 1900s, the land
upon which the Plunge sits belonged to resident
John Nicholl, who thought there was oil underground
and drilled down more than 1,000 feet in hopes
of finding it. He discovered no crude oil — only
fresh water. Nicholl then donated the land to the
city.
The Richmond Municipal Natatorium was built
in 1926. At that time, it was a start-of-the-art
two-story building with an indoor warm water swimming
pool, a fountain, observation balconies and an
open truss ceiling reminiscent of the Sutro Baths
in San Francisco.
Through the years, the Plunge
has been a distinctive asset to the city of Richmond
where youth, elders and those with illnesses and
disabilities have come to swim, exercise, recuperate
and enjoy family activities.
In August 2001, the
city closed down the Plunge due to the failing
safety standards of all the building’s systems.
The deteriorated conditions were caused by age,
seismic activity, the humid environment of the
natatorium and deferred maintenance.
“A lot
of people have been waiting many years for the
demolition to happen,” said Richmond Councilman
Tom Butt. “The city is going to bring back
icons that people know about the history of and
enjoy.”
“We are here to alert the community
that the demolition can finally begin,” said
Ellie Strauss, executive director of Save the Richmond
Plunge Trust and president of Richmond Friends
of Recreation. “We are now in demolition,
or phase 1, which should take one to one and a
half years to complete, and then we will work on
phase 2 once we have the funds.”
Phase 2
of the renovation includes rebuilding the changing,
bath and shower facilities and restoring the front,
neoclassical part of the building.
The city of
Richmond was awarded a matching $500,000 grant
from the Wayne and Gladys Valley Foundation to
be used for phase 2 only. Other funds will come
from private sources.
Supporters have held garden
tours, benefits, concerts, dinners and “Plunge
jams” with free swimming, music and food
to raise money and awareness.
KQED aired a documentary
about the site, entitled “The Plunge: Time
Laps Through History.”
For more information
about donations, contact Ellie Strauss at (510)
620-6820 or bestrauss@comcast.net, or visit www.richmondplunge.org.
Donations may be mailed to Save the Richmond Plunge
Trust, P.O. Box 70443, Pt. Richmond, CA94807-70443.