Piscine Guy Berthier
Adult Admission Price & Policy
€3.50. [May, 2018]
Note: Admission policies and prices shown in Swimmers Guide listings are believed to be correct as of the date(s) shown in brackets. If not correct now, please click on the "Edit" button so this listing can be fixed and the information brought current. This site works best when its users take an active role in the maintenance of the data.
Note: Admission policies and prices shown in Swimmers Guide listings are believed to be correct as of the date(s) shown in brackets. If not correct now, please click on the "Edit" button so this listing can be fixed and the information brought current. This site works best when its users take an active role in the maintenance of the data.
Full-Size, Year-Round Pools & Boards
25m x 15m, 6 lanes, 1.9m - 4.3m depth, chlorine sanitized, indoors,
water temperature not reported
Location
Teams That Use This Facility
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Facility Notes
NOTE: The pool operates during the school year only; it is closed in summer.
Facility Reviews
This pool has much longer open hours than the other indoor pool in Arles (the Piscine Philippe Rouget ); it is not rickety / falling apart and is well maintained. It has separate male and female changing rooms, a rarity in Europe. It also has the annoying feature of making one walk through flowing water to enter the dressing room, encouraging almost everyone to remove shoes and socks. Lockers require a €1 refundable deposit.
The pool was quite crowded, but easy to swim in, owing to the politeness of the swimmers. There were four to six people per lane, over all six lanes. There were backstroke flags at each end and the water was very clean at 9/10. There were some iron oxide stains on the bottom of the pool disconcerting to one member of our group but not to me. The ever-present machine for swimsuits, caps, and goggles was in the lobby, with lower prices than "big city" pool vending machines.
The schedule, as is customary in France, depends on school holidays, which they all know, but foreigners have to look up elsewhere (see Le calendrier scolaire).
It's a long walk from the city center but probably accessible by a local bus. There's plenty of free parking. There is a seasonal shuttle bus that should at least reduce the walking distance to this pool from the city center.
[May, 2018]
The pool was quite crowded, but easy to swim in, owing to the politeness of the swimmers. There were four to six people per lane, over all six lanes. There were backstroke flags at each end and the water was very clean at 9/10. There were some iron oxide stains on the bottom of the pool disconcerting to one member of our group but not to me. The ever-present machine for swimsuits, caps, and goggles was in the lobby, with lower prices than "big city" pool vending machines.
The schedule, as is customary in France, depends on school holidays, which they all know, but foreigners have to look up elsewhere (see Le calendrier scolaire).
It's a long walk from the city center but probably accessible by a local bus. There's plenty of free parking. There is a seasonal shuttle bus that should at least reduce the walking distance to this pool from the city center.
[May, 2018]