Piscina del Victoria Park: Nuoto in Corsia Coperto a Causeway Bay
La Piscina del Victoria Park si trova accanto al parco principale di Causeway Bay in un edificio con facciata in vetro aperto nel 2013. Due piscine coperte riscaldate funzionano tutto l'anno: una vasca agonistica da 50 metri e una vasca multiuso con piattaforme per i tuffi. Questa è la struttura comunale di Hong Kong per nuotatori seri, non un parco acquatico.
Informazioni rapide
- Posizione
- 1 Hing Fat Street, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong
- Come arrivare
- Tin Hau MTR Station (Uscita A), 5 min. a piedi
- Tempo necessario
- 1-2 ore incluso cambio
- Costo
- 17 HK$ giorni feriali / 20 HK$ weekend (adulti), 8 HK$ feriali / 9 HK$ weekend (bambino/anziano), solo Octopus
- Ideale per
- Nuotatori in corsia, fitness in viaggio

Panoramica
La Piscina del Victoria Park si trova accanto al parco principale di Causeway Bay in un edificio con facciata in vetro aperto nel 2013. Due piscine coperte riscaldate funzionano tutto l'anno: una vasca agonistica da 50 metri e una vasca multiuso con piattaforme per i tuffi. Struttura comunale per nuotatori seri, non un parco acquatico.
Ingresso 17 HK$ nei giorni feriali / 20 HK$ nei weekend per adulti, 8/9 HK$ per bambini e anziani. Solo Octopus card. La struttura funziona a sessioni con pause di pulizia: mattina (6:30-12/13), pomeriggio (14-18) e sera (19-22). Le mattine infrasettimanali sono spesso riservate alle donne. Prevedete 90 minuti-2 ore incluso cambio e doccia.
Budget 90 minutes to two hours including changing and showering. The pool is five minutes on foot from Tin Hau MTR (Exit A). Lockers are small and require HK$10 to HK$20 deposit. Bring your own towel, swim cap, and goggles. No food or outside drinks allowed inside.
This facility makes sense if you're a regular swimmer maintaining training while traveling in Hong Kong, or if you want indoor exercise during rainy weather. It's not a tourist attraction. If you're looking for scenic swimming or family water play, Repulse Bay beach or one of Hong Kong's outdoor leisure pools serves better. For broader context, this sits adjacent to Victoria Park, which offers green space and morning tai chi.
La vasca principale è 50x25 metri, profondità 1,2-2 metri. Otto corsie sull'intera lunghezza. Disciplina di corsia applicata: corsie lente, medie e veloci segnate. Temperatura dell'acqua ca. 27-28 °C tutto l'anno. La vasca multiuso è 33x25 metri con profondità max 5 metri, piattaforme per tuffi a 1, 3, 5, 7,5 e 10 metri.
Come Funziona il Sistema a Sessioni?
Sessioni fisse con pause obbligatorie per pulizia di 30-60 minuti. Sessioni mattutine infrasettimanali spesso riservate alle donne. Le sessioni possono raggiungere la capacità massima, specialmente in estate, festivi e sere infrasettimanali. Arrivate 15-20 minuti prima dell'inizio della sessione.
Quando Visitare?
Mattine infrasettimanali 6:30-11: meno gente, specialmente durante le sessioni femminili. Pomeriggi infrasettimanali dalle 14: più tranquilli delle sere. Evitate le sere infrasettimanali 18-21: afflusso di impiegati. Weekend affollati tutto il giorno.
Biglietti e visite guidate
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Come Arrivare
Tin Hau MTR Station (Uscita A) sulla Island Line, cinque minuti a piedi. Causeway Bay MTR Station (Uscita F2) anche raggiungibile, ca. 10-12 minuti.
Errori Comuni
Sessions can reach capacity, especially during summer months, public holidays, and weekday evenings after work hours. Once capacity is reached, entry is closed until swimmers exit. Arriving 15 to 20 minutes before session start improves your odds of securing entry and a locker.
Chi Dovrebbe Visitare / Saltare
Visitare: nuotatori regolari in allenamento, fitness con brutto tempo, tuffatori per piattaforme, viaggiatori vicino a hotel di Causeway Bay. Saltare: turisti che privilegiano il sightseeing, famiglie con bambini piccoli per gioco acquatico, chi cerca nuoto panoramico (meglio le spiagge).
Weekday mornings between 6:30 AM and 11 AM see the lightest crowds, particularly during the women-only sessions. If you're an early riser maintaining a training routine, this window offers the best lane availability and minimal wait times for lockers.
Weekday afternoons starting around 2 PM, right after the cleaning break, are quieter than evenings but busier than mornings. This slot works if you're structuring a day around shopping or sightseeing in Causeway Bay and want to slot in exercise mid-afternoon.
Avoid weekday evenings between 6 PM and 9 PM if you dislike crowded lanes. Office workers flood the facility after the workday ends. Lane discipline becomes harder to maintain with higher traffic.
Weekends stay busy throughout the day. Saturday and Sunday mornings see families and recreational swimmers. If your schedule forces a weekend visit, target the session opening time rather than arriving mid-session.
September through November offers comfortable conditions with lower humidity outside the building, making the walk to and from the MTR more pleasant. June through August brings peak summer heat and humidity, though the indoor environment stays controlled.
How Do You Get to Victoria Park Swimming Pool?
Tin Hau MTR Station (Exit A) on the Island Line puts you five minutes away on foot. Exit onto Causeway Bay Road, head east toward Hing Fat Street. The pool building's glass facade is visible as you approach Victoria Park. Look for signage in English and Chinese.
Causeway Bay MTR Station (Exit F2) is also walkable, roughly 10 to 12 minutes. This route is slightly longer but connects if you're coming from shopping areas like Times Square or Hysan Place. Walk east through Victoria Park to reach the pool's entrance on Hing Fat Street.
Multiple bus routes stop near Victoria Park: 2, 8, 8P, 19, 81, 102, 103, 104, 106, 110, 118. The closest stops are along Causeway Bay Road or Gloucester Road. From the bus stop, follow signs toward Victoria Park and navigate to the eastern side where the pool building sits.
If you're walking from Central, the route along Hennessy Road or Gloucester Road takes about 25 to 30 minutes. This is practical if you're combining multiple Causeway Bay stops.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
- Arriving without an Octopus card. The facility does not accept cash. You need an Octopus card to pay entry fees and locker deposits. If you don't have one, the nearest convenience store or MTR station can issue a card.
- Bringing large bags or excessive belongings. Lockers are compact, roughly 30 cm wide by 40 cm tall. Oversized backpacks or multiple bags won't fit. Pack minimally: swimwear, towel, goggles, and a change of clothes.
- Expecting a leisure pool with slides or play areas. This is a competition-standard facility designed for lap swimming and training. There are no water slides, splash zones, or shallow play areas for young children. Families with toddlers should look elsewhere.
- Not checking for competition closures. Swimming meets and water polo tournaments periodically close the pools to public use. The LCSD website lists events, though schedules can change. Verify availability before traveling across Hong Kong specifically for a swim.
- Choosing the wrong lane speed. Lane designations (slow, medium, fast) are enforced. Lifeguards will redirect you if your pace doesn't match. Assess honestly to avoid disrupting other swimmers or getting corrected repeatedly.
How Does Victoria Park Swimming Pool Fit Into a Causeway Bay Itinerary?
Swimming here makes sense as a morning fitness activity before moving into shopping or dining. Finish a 7 AM to 9 AM swim session, shower and change, then walk five minutes to (10 minutes east on Tin Hau Temple Road). From there, circle back through Victoria Park or continue into Causeway Bay's retail core: Times Square, Hysan Place, or Sogo.
Alternatively, structure a mid-day break around the pool. Spend the morning shopping or visiting museums, swim during the 2 PM afternoon session, then continue with dinner and evening activities. directly adjacent to the pool offers green space for a post-swim walk or rest before moving on.
For travelers staying in Causeway Bay hotels, the pool provides a consistent fitness option without requiring travel across Hong Kong. Morning swim sessions can replace hotel gym workouts while offering a local facility experience.
Who Should Visit Victoria Park Swimming Pool?
Regular swimmers maintaining training routines while traveling will find this facility useful. The 50-meter pool meets FINA standards, water temperature is controlled, and lane discipline allows for proper interval work or distance swimming.
Fitness-focused travelers looking for indoor exercise options during Hong Kong's rainy season (May through September) benefit from the year-round heated pools. Unlike outdoor pools or beaches, weather doesn't impact usability.
Divers or swimmers interested in platform diving can access the multi-purpose pool's facilities. The 10-meter platform and range of springboards provide training opportunities uncommon in many cities.
Families with older children (12 and up) comfortable with lane swimming can use this as a structured activity. Younger children require direct supervision and won't find dedicated play features.
Who Should Skip This?
Casual tourists prioritizing sightseeing over fitness should allocate their time elsewhere. This is a municipal swimming facility, not a cultural attraction or scenic experience. Victoria Peak, Star Ferry, or Temple Street Night Market deliver more distinctive Hong Kong experiences.
Families with young children seeking recreational water play should visit leisure pools or outdoor facilities with dedicated children's areas. Victoria Park Swimming Pool enforces lane discipline and age restrictions (under-12s require adult accompaniment, under-5s need arm's-reach supervision).
Travelers looking for scenic or atmospheric swimming should head to Hong Kong's beaches: Repulse Bay, Shek O, or Stanley. These offer ocean swimming, views, and beach culture without entry fees.
If you're uncomfortable with strict rules (lane discipline, mandatory swim caps for long hair, session clearing breaks), the facility's structure may feel restrictive. Hong Kong's hotel pools offer more relaxed environments, though often at smaller scales.
Consigli da insider
- Le sessioni mattutine infrasettimanali riservate alle donne (6:30-12/13) offrono le condizioni di nuoto più calme.
- Arrivate 15-20 minuti prima dell'inizio sessione per assicurarvi un armadietto vicino all'ingresso della vasca.
- La vasca multiuso ha meno traffico di corsie rispetto alla vasca da 50 metri. Usatela se volete nuotare senza disciplina di corsia rigida.
- Portate poco: armadietti piccoli (ca. 30x40 cm). Uno zaino piccolo con l'essenziale funziona meglio.
- Controllate il sito LCSD per calendari competizioni prima di viaggiare appositamente per nuotare.
A chi è adatto Piscina del Victoria Park?
- Nuotatori in allenamento
- Fitness con brutto tempo
- Accesso a piattaforme per tuffi
- Viaggiatori vicino a hotel Causeway Bay
- Allenamenti di nuoto strutturati
Attrazioni nelle vicinanze
Altre cose da vedere a Causeway Bay:
- Tempio Tin Hau
Il Tempio Tin Hau si trova in una stradina stretta a Causeway Bay dove i fedeli bruciano incenso per la dea del mare di Hong Kong. Costruito nel 1747 da pescatori Hakka, questo piccolo tempio custodisce una campana della dinastia Qing e decorazioni sul tetto elaborate. È un luogo di culto attivo, non un'attrazione turistica – cinque minuti dal Victoria Park.
- Victoria Park
Il Victoria Park si estende su 19 ettari a Causeway Bay dove i locali praticano tai chi all'alba, giocano a tennis sui campi pubblici e fanno jogging intorno ai prati. Aperto nel 1957 su terreno bonificato, è il parco più grande dell'Isola di Hong Kong. Spazio verde funzionale, non parco paesaggistico – circondato da grattacieli e strade trafficate.