Sub-Acqua Café Aquarium, located on the edge of the artificial lagoon.[2]
Beach Club, consisting of a gym, spa, shop, kiosk-bar, outdoor jacuzzis, and a heated swimming pool covered by a glass pyramid.[2]
Nightclub, an underground building on the side of a hill with a sunken dance floor, bar, and DJ.[2]
Fragata Building, a pyramid-shaped building with 141 apartments.[2]
Bitácora Building, with a total of 60 apartments.[2]
Artificial lagoon
The resort has one of the world's largest swimming pools. At the time of its completion in 2006, it was in the Guinness Book of World Records for the largest pool in the world by area.[3][4]
The pool is 1,013m (3,323ft) long,[4] covering 8.2ha (20 acres),[4] containing some 250million litres (66million US gallons)[5] of seawater, with a maximum depth of 3.5m (11.5ft).[6] The water is pumped from the adjacent Pacific Ocean, then filtered and treated. Access to the pool is limited to resort residents only.
Crystal Lagoons, a company created by Fernando Fischmann in addition to Inmobiliaria El Plomo and the lead architects Marques + Garcés & Asociados Arquitectos, developed the lagoon.
References
"Big Dipper". National Geographic. April 2010. p.30.
Crystal Lagoons Corporation LLC. "Patent US 8790518 B2". US Patent Office. Retrieved 15 October 2014– via Google Patents. Minimal and maximal depths were 1.2 and 3.5 meters, being 2.8 meters the average depth.
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