If you like doing laps in the swimming pool, you might
want to stock up on the energy drinks before diving in
to this one.
It is more than 1,000 yards long, covers 20 acres, has a
115ft deep end and holds 66 million gallons of water.
Yesterday the Guinness Book of Records named the vast
pool beside the sea in Chile as the biggest in the
world.
But if you fancy splashing out on one of your own - and
you have the space to accommodate it - then beware: This
one took five years to build, cost nearly £1 billion and
the annual maintenance bill will be £2 million.
The man-made saltwater lagoon has been attracting huge
crowds to the San Alfonso del Mar resort at Algarrobo,
on Chile 's southern coast, since it opened last month.
Its turquoise waters are so crystal clear that you can
see the bottom even in the deep end.
It dwarfs the world's second biggest pool, the Orthlieb
- nicknamed the Big Splash - in Morocco, which is a mere
150 yards long and 100 yards wide. An Olympic-size pool
measures some 50 yards by 25 yards.
Chile's monster pool uses a computer-controlled suction
and filtration system to keep fresh seawater in
permanent circulation, drawing it in from the ocean at
one end and pumping it out at the other.
The sun warms the water to 26c, nine degrees warmer than
the adjoining sea.
Chilean biochemist Fernando Fischmann, whose Crystal
Lagoons Corporation designed the pool, said advanced
engineering meant his company could build 'an
impressive artificial paradise' even in inhospitable
areas.
'As long as we have access to unlimited seawater, we
can make it work, and it causes no damage to the ocean'.