Right on. There is a spiral staircase that rises when needed and lowers when not in use to keep “clean lines.” You enter from below and there is a hatch similar to that of a submarine- an airlock of sorts for entry and exit. The sides and bottom are clear so people in the building on the floor below can see the swimmers. That’s the design anyway.
On a technical note- and “infinity pool” strictly speaking- requires that one or more sides of the pool be lower than the water level and allow water to spill over the side of the pool (usually into a catch, overflow pool, or adjacent body of water.)
I can’t tell from the photos- but the only design mention I’ve seen says that a “building management system” will prevent water from splashing to the streets below. If there is not at least one wall lower than water level it is not strictly an “infinity pool” and if there are not 4 lower than the water is not a “360 degree infinity pool.”
I can’t tell from the photos- but the only design mention I’ve seen says that a “building management system” will prevent water from splashing to the streets below. If there is not at least one wall lower than water level it is not strictly an “infinity pool” and if there are not 4 lower than the water is not a “360 degree infinity pool.”