Some popular tourist spots in Beijing are the water cube which held the 2000 Olympic games for the swimming.
The swimming pool in Beijing Water cube is 13 metres deep
The official water temperature ranges for Olympic-sized pools used for the Olympic games are: Swimming Pools: 25-28 °C Diving pools: Not less than 26 °C Water Polo pools: 25-27 °C Synchronized swimming: 26-28 °C
The Beijing National Aquatics Center is better known as "the Water Cube" (水立方), built alongside Beijing National Stadium in the Olympic Green for the swimming competitions of the 2008 Summer Olympics.
Swimming, synchronized swimming, diving, and water polo.
WATER CUBE
600,000 gallons
Swimming has been held at every Olympic games since 1896. Open water swimming was added in the 2008 Olympics.
Yes, Olympic swimming pools (and all competitive swimming pools) are heated. Olympic swimming pools are kept at temperatures typically around 77-79 degrees Fahrenheit or around 25-26.1 degrees Celsius. However, the temperature can go up to 82 degrees Fahrenheit or 27.7 degrees Celsius and be acceptable to FINA, the organization overseeing Olympic swimming. FINA's optimal temperatures for water polo are 79 Fahrenheit or 26 Celsius; for synchronized swimming, 81 Fahrenheit or 27 Celsius; and for diving, not under 79 Fahrenheit or 26 Celsius.
Yes.
The official water temperature ranges for Olympic-sized pools used for the Olympic games are: Swimming pools: 25-28 °C Diving pools: Not less than 26 °C Water polo pools: 25-27 °C Synchronized swimming: 26-28 °C
Swimming Water polo Diving Synchronised Swimming