The Du Quoin Municipal Swimming Pool takes on the look of an Olympic Village Saturday as more than 350 championship swimmers, their coaches and families from eight communities arrive here for the Southern Illinois swim championships. Between 1,000 and 1,200 people were expected in Du Quoin.
The water is crystal clear and records that have withstood the test of time are expected to fall. Du Quoin pool manager and assistant swimming Indians coach Nicole Heape has a championship swim record herself that has stood for 19 years since her 12-year swimming career ended.
She said facility preparations, concessions planning and meet organization work have been going on around the clock for the past week.
Swimmers will start arriving in Du Quoin around 6:30 a.m. for 7 a.m. practice. Some 362 heat competitors will head for the starting blocks at 9 a.m. The last heats should be raced at around 4 p.m.
Grounds around the pool are being double cut--mowed once on Monday and will be completely mowed again on Friday.
The meet is rotated between the eight communities in the league each summer--Du Quoin, Marion, Herrin, Mount Vernon, Centralia, Anna, Salem and Harrisburg. This is Du Quoin’s year.
The pool underwent a $100,000 plumbing, filtration and patio renovation last year courtesy the City of Du Quoin and its park board. This year the Harris Family Christian Foundation wrote a $10,000 check to accomplish the complete renovation of the bath houses at the pool.
It has been an extreme makeover that has made the facility far better and far nicer than even when it was opened as Armstrong Municipal Pool in 1979. Back then, Mayor Robert Armstrong, the Du Quoin Park Board and members of the 1976 Bicentennial Commission had a recreational vision for Du Quoin.
A facility that was Du Quoin’s crown jewel of recreation fell on hard times because of disrepair, leaks and equipment malfunctions. Attendance dwindled. Hosting swim meets was sometimes an embarrassment. Two pools in Southern Illinois have closed because of similar problems. Most were built during the same era.
What a difference a year can make. Some days during the pool’s popular “Quarter Night” there are upwards of 170 swimmers at the facility.
The Du Quoin City Council, the Du Quoin Park Board and the Kurt Harris Family Christian Foundation made a huge commitment to restore this beautiful facility to its original 1979 condition.
In no small way the credit goes to plumber Randy Shivley, park board member Josh Downs and Du Quoin city administrator Blaine Bastien along with a small army of volunteers headed by pool manager Nicole Heape.