Loading...

Posts Tagged ‘Worlds Most Amazing Pools’

World’s Most Amazing Hotel Pools

Jun 15

One of my favorite things to do on vacation is snorkel or swim in the pool.  Here are a few amazing pools from around the world gathered by BudgetTravel.com.

Park Hyatt

Tokyo

Why It’s Cool: Sure, Bill Murray took a dip here in Lost in Translation, but it’s the view from this sleek, 47th-floor swimming pool that’s truly remarkable: Floor-to-ceiling windows frame jaw-dropping vistas of Tokyo, and even venerable Mount Fuji, while the steel-and-glass pyramid-shaped ceiling floods the pool with natural light. The 65-foot-long, four-lane pool is striking at night, too, when the city’s skyscrapers light up.

San Alfonso del Mar, Algarrobo, Chile

Courtesy of San Alfonso del Mar

San Alfonso del Mar

Algarrobo, Chile

Why It’s Cool: You can take small sailboats out on this saltwater pool that Guinness World Records calls the largest in the world. At two thirds of a mile in length, the massive stretch of water has room for several man-made sand beaches. For nighttime swimming, head to the temperature-controlled beach inside the pool’s centrally located glass pyramid—the water and the sand are heated.

Hotel Caruso Belvedere, Ravello, Italy

Courtesy of Hotel Caruso Belvedere

Hotel Caruso Belvedere

Ravello, Italy

Why It’s Cool: The Hotel Caruso Belvedere is set at the highest point in the sun-splashed Amalfi Coast town of Ravello, so the open-air infinity pool offers unobstructed, panoramic views of one of the world’s most dramatic coastlines—and the sea beyond. It doesn’t hurt that the pool itself is flanked by 11th-century Roman ruins.

Umaid Bhawan Palace, Jodhpur, India

Courtesy of Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces

Umaid Bhawan Palace

Jodhpur, India

Why It’s Cool: In a massive, 347-room palace overlooking the Blue City of Jodhpur in the Indian state of Rajasthan, this serene, temperature-controlled swimming basin takes advantage of natural candlelight—with rose petals sometimes strewn on the surface. The hotel is run by the Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces, which shares the property with the palace’s owner, the Maharaja of Jodhpur—who has been known to swim laps with the guests from time to time.