City of Fort Lauderdale Hosts Topping Out Ceremony For Historic Permanent High Diving Tower

diving-tower
The new 27-meter ISHOF Diving Tower is topped off on Thursday.

On Thursday, the City of Fort Lauderdale hosted the topping out ceremony to celebrate the last piece of steel being erected for the permanent 27m diving tower as part of the ongoing International Swimming Hall of Fame Aquatic Complex construction.

The permanent high diving tower will be the first in the western hemisphere and just the second in the entire world, with the other being in Zhaoqing, China. In May of 2019, the city of Fort Lauderdale was in the early stages of evaluating the construction of an iconic High Diving Tower, and in July 2020 the city commissioners voted to fully fund the 27-meter dive tower and an Observation Deck.

last-piece

The last piece to be topped off. Photo Courtesy: Andy Ross

“Special thanks need to go out to Mayor Dean Trantalis and City Manager Chris Logerbloom for their vision and Bruce Wigo for championing this possibility. A big “Thank You” to Vice Mayor Heather Moraitis, Commissioners Steve GlassmanBen Sorrenson, and Robert Mckinzie for their support.

“The City Parks and Recreation department led by Phil Thornberg should be proud of this accomplishment along with Laura Voet and Hansel Phelps who oversaw this construction. This is a special day for the diving community worldwide and will truly reinforce Fort Lauderdale as THE international destination for diving and aquatic sports.”  – Brent Rutemiller President and CEO of the International Swimming Hall of Fame, who was not present due to his ongoing battle with plasma cell leukemia.

miami-fort-lauderdale-divers

University of Miami divers with the Fort Lauderdale diving team members. Photo Courtesy: Andy Ross

Special guests for the dedication included World High Diving Champion Steven LoBue, the first diver to complete a forward quintuple somersault with a half-twist in the pike position, with a degree of difficulty 5.4. FINA High Diving Technical Committee Chair and Olympian Tom Gompf, USA Diving Olympians Dave Burgering, Jevon Tarantino, Michelle Davidson-Sandelin, University of Miami head coach Randy Ableman and USA National Team Members for the Hurricanes David Dinsmore, Zach Cooper and Briadam Herrera.

steve-lobue

Steve LoBue. Photo Courtesy: Andy Ross

“It’s an honor to be in my position and help guide the sport of high diving towards the Olympics,” LoBue said. “It is a tremendous honor to have this here in our backyard in the city of Fort Lauderdale to help continue the historic track record of diving excellence that this city has. Fort Lauderdale is really deeply rooted in the hearts of the diving community. We are super excited to have the structure go up and what a big step for the sport of high diving towards our Olympic dream.”

“This is going to be the Taj Mahal of diving – not just high diving,” ISHOF Honor Contributor Tom Gompf said. “The whole world is anxious to come back to this venue. We have shown the pictures of these plans around the world and it is going to be great. I am so proud Fort Lauderdale has endorsed this project and we have had various amounts of support in the past and this has been fantastic. We have had tremendous history already but it is going to get better.”

The City Commission, acting as the Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA) Board of Commissioners, approved funding to support the addition of a north observation deck and 27-meter dive tower as part of the ongoing improvements at the aquatic center at a total cost of $7,870,261.

Diving Tower-Deck

Artist’s rendition of the Hall of Fame diving well.

The high diving tower has been constructed using precast concrete sections and includes decorative glass fiber reinforced concrete (GFRC) cladding and decorative lighting.

The $5,101,060 cost will be paid for with CRA funds. The north observation deck adds approximately 2,800 square feet of amenity space and includes new elevator and stair tower access, architectural GFRC cladding on the building, and decorative railings and lighting. The $2,769,201 cost will be paid for with park impact fees.

The 27-meter dive tower includes nine platform levels and combines springboard (one-meter, three-meter), platform diving (one-meter, three-meter, five-meter, seven-point-five-meter, 10-meter) and high diving (15-meter, 20-meter, 24-meter and 27-meter).

The design-build construction team is led by Fort Lauderdale-based Hensel Phelps Construction Company. The tower is constructed of 96 precast concrete panels, and rests on a foundation five-feet deep and 53-feet wide, supported by 35 augercast piles at a depth of 60-feet. There are 162 stairs to the top of the tower.

While there is a long history of high diving feats, the sport was first recognized as the sixth aquatic discipline in 2014 by Federation International de Natation (FINA), the world’s international governing body. At a height of 27-meters, a diver can reach speeds up to 60 mph in 3 seconds.

The Aquatic Center is scheduled for substantial completion in September 2022.

last piece

Last piece to be placed on the new tower. Photo Courtesy: ISHOF

 

diving-tower-1-scaled

Last piece being placed atop the tower. Photo Courtesy: ISHOF

 

dive tower 1

Tower is now complete!; Photo Courtesy: ISHOF

 

 

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

Welcome to our community. We invite you to join our discussion. Our community guidelines are simple: be respectful and constructive, keep on topic, and support your fellow commenters. Commenting signifies that you agree to our Terms of Use

2 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Conrad Kraus
Conrad Kraus
3 years ago

It looks like platform diving is going to an new height above the 10 meter high now. I was a swimmer with the Vesper Boat Club 1959 to end of 1961. I participated with Carl Robie in the relays. I was a backstroker. My two brothers were also swimmers with VBC. My mother worked the table recording the times of swimmers after events and dad a timer. We knew you Bruce and your brother Chick. Great times. Now my grandson Paul Spear[Mother was a Kraus]has started competitive swimming with the Hatboro “Y” now merged with the Abington “Y” and changed name to the Willow Grove “Y” Hatboro was one of the 20 original AAU teams in the Philadelphia Swim Society of Delaware Valley. I have my fingers crossed he catches on and really picks up interest.

Cynthia Potter
Cynthia Potter
3 years ago

Spectacular! A wonderful commitment from Ft.Lauderdale and ISHOF to and for diving. Congratulations for making this happen in a place that has such a rich history with DIVING worldwide.

2
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x