Olympic Trials Competition Pool Will Go To City Of West Fargo, North Dakota

A community group in West Fargo, North Dakota has purchased the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials competition pool, a Myrtha pool which will be first built into the CenturyLink Center in Omaha, Nebraska for the 2016 Trials. After the Olympic Trials are over, it will be broken down and moved to West Fargo.

The community group, a grassroots nonprofit organization called UP Aquatics, has been working for six years to bring in a new aquatics facility. To construct the facility, UP Aquatics has partnered with the West Fargo School District, the fastest growing district in North Dakota. The district serves 10,000 students and projects that number will grow to 15,000 over the next few years.

According to Dr. Lance Bergstrom, a local eye surgeon and president and spokesperson for UP Aquatics, the new facility will be used as a practice space for West Fargo’s two high schools (and, in the future, a third, which will soon be added to the district) and the West Fargo Flyers Swim Team. He says that the University of North Dakota diving program has also expressed strong interest in the site. Other teams who will be able to host practices and meets at the pool include the University of North Dakota swimming, Minnesota State University Moorhead, Concordia College, and multiple area club teams. Bergstrom says Moorhead is particularly interested in the facility’s capacity to host NCAA Division II Nationals. UP Aquatics also sees the pool as a potential site for future Arena Pro Swim Series meets or the U.S. Paralympics Swimming Open, which was in Bismark this year.

The aquatic center has already been christened the Hulbert Aquatic Facility, in remembrance of Fargo South High School and Iowa State University swimmer and diver Heidi Ann Hulbert Rowe, who died at age 35 from diabetes complications. Hulbert, who graduated in 1991, is still one of ISU’s top 10 all-time divers.

The Hulbert Aquatic Facility will be 70,000 square feet, with seating for 1,200 and a separate diving well, if the group stays on track with their plan to enhance the 22 million dollar project. It will be world-class, the nicest facility in the Upper Midwest.

The area doesn’t currently have an indoor long course aquatic center, and it sits around a four hour drive from the nearest ones in Bismark and Minneapolis.

Bergstrom thinks that North Dakota’s current lack of facilities has hampered local swimmers’ development.

“This thing is going to lift swimming in our region,” he said. “We’re kind of a late bloomer in terms of swimming, but you’re going to start seeing a lot more North Dakotan swimmers start to qualify for Olympic Trials with these advancements.”

He also is excited about the possibility for West Fargo to begin hosting nationally-significant meets.

“We’re really just like a small Omaha,” he said. “And we’re delighted to use the Myrtha pool. We’re getting the Lamborghini of high school pools, and over time, we’re going to save a lot of money from their filtration systems and other advancements.”

Back in 2014, The Woodlands Swim Team and the Woodlands Masters Swim Team in Texas put down a deposit on this same pool, but, according to Mike Mintenko of Myrtha Pools, their contract with Myrtha included a provision that allowed them to back out of the sale by June 2015. They did, and UP jumped on the opportunity.

“We are extremely excited at Myrtha Pools to be working with UP Aquatics in bringing the legacy of the Trials to the state of North Dakota,” said Mintenko.

The process of relocating the Trials pools is an American swimming tradition. The 2004 pool now calls Crafton Hills College in Yucaipa, California its home; the 2008 pool went to Virginia; and the 2012 pool ended up in Boston.

The 2016 warmup pool is still available for purchase from Myrtha.

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McKenna
8 years ago

Loving the fact that Moorhead (my future school) has strong interest in this pool, but I’m pretty sure it’s North Dakota State University that resides in Fargo, not UND.

McKenna
Reply to  McKenna
8 years ago

Just kidding about UND, I reread the article and it made more sense. Whoops!

Shawn
8 years ago

What about the water? Where does it go? Down the drain?

Randy Rogers
8 years ago

Anyone know how much the pool sold for, or how much the warmup pool might go for?

billy
8 years ago

If I’m not mistaken the Berkeley Aquatic Club (N.J.) also bought a 50 meter pool from the 2004 Olympic Trials in Long Beach. After finalizing all their details, the have built a new facility in New Providence, NJ that houses the 50 meter pool. I think it just opened…..Correct me if I am wrong.

Sophie
8 years ago

Good for ND. There should be some more high class pools in the North. The only pool I can think of in that area is University of Minnesota, so that should be good for a more central location in the US. When I think about it… certain regions tend to excel with more, nicer facilities…

West coast:
Irvine, CA
Palo Alto, CA
Santa Clara, CA (Let’s be real… California has like a million 50m pools)
but also:
Gresham, OR
Federal Way, WA

Westish:
Tempe, AZ
Scottsdale AZ,
Mesa, AZ
Kino, AZ
Can’t really think of any in Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Idaho, Wyoming, Montana (although I guess they are… Read more »

Joe
Reply to  Sophie
8 years ago

There is a top facility that was built a few years ago in Geneva, OH – east of Cleveland.

Brandon
Reply to  Sophie
8 years ago

Iowa City, Minnesota! That is an outrage sir!

Swim mom
8 years ago

Congratulations!! The only bummer about this is the location that was chosen. Most definitely should be located in the south part of West Fargo.

DMSWIM
8 years ago

I swim in the 2008 pool in Richmond, Virginia and it is quite nice! Still very fast!

Kevin
8 years ago

NDSU does not have a swimming program, they are referring to UND. Fargo is one f the fastest growing areas in the country and it’s nothing like depicted in the movie Fargo (which actually takes place mainly in Minnesota).
Any idea how long it takes to move and get a pool like his up and running? This time next year, or?

dmswim
Reply to  Kevin
8 years ago

The 2008 pool opened in Richmond in March of 2012. There could have been other local issues that slowed it’s opening unrelated to pool installation.

Erich
Reply to  Kevin
8 years ago

The pool is set to open in fall of 2017.

Erich
Reply to  Erich
8 years ago

The pool is set to open in fall of 2017.

About Hannah Hecht

Hannah Hecht

Hannah Hecht grew up in Kansas and spent most of her childhood trying to convince coaches to let her swim backstroke in freestyle sets. She took her passion to Morningside College in Sioux City, Iowa and swam at NAIA Nationals all four years. After graduating in 2015, she moved to …

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