Buy a Pool in Germany

A pool in the garden is a desire for most buyers. It enhances the living space, creates a vacation atmosphere and increases the worthiness of the property. In accordance with experts, based on location, size and design of the pool, it may soon add up to 20 percent to a house’s value.

In Germany, public swimming pools are called “Freibad” (literally, “free bath”). They’re usually large and available to the public. You spend a nominal admission price to enter, and many come with a sauna or other facilities for relaxation. Diving platforms, springboards and slides are also common. Some pools have special areas for lap swimmers. Aufstellpools

Traditionally, Germans don’t swim naked, and they often shower before entering the water. Some women might tan topless, but they have to wear a bikini or something similar. Muslim women may elect to wear a burkini, although they’re sometimes susceptible to discrimination. The town of Oranienburg, as an example, attemptedto ban the garment in 2018.

The Stadtbad Schoneberg “Hans Rosenthal” in Berlin is a good example of a contemporary, public swimming pool. 36 months of extensive renovation work turned this old-fashioned pool right into a place for your family, with slides, pools for laps and non-swimmers, and a lot more. It’s named for a Jewish entertainer who learned to swim there after being forbidden by the Nazis to do so.

While Germany has plenty of unique, original spots for bathing, many of the country’s municipal outdoor swimming pools really are a bit rundown and in need of some maintenance. It’s resulted in a series of headlines about mass brawls at these popular summer hangouts.

Some have tried to revive them, such as for instance with the Jod-Sole-Therme in Bad Bevensen. It features an indoor and outdoor pool, a wellness center with massage therapies and a sauna, and an onsite restaurant. The pool is shaped like two overseas containers that were welded together and filled with freshwater to become an innovative bathing spot in the center of the former Zollverein Coking Plant.

As the summer gets hot, many Germans are spending plenty of time in the water. The country’s pools are often saturated in locals as well as travelers from abroad who would like to experience German life in most its glory. And with higher than a million asylum seekers and refugees arriving in the last few years, there’s a special challenge in trying to integrate them. For instance, one of Berlin’s largest pools on Columbiadamm Street is situated near refugee housing centers, so both newcomers and longtime Berliners are enjoying their pool time in exactly the same place.