Asia

Swimming schools in KL wade into new territory – shop lots and industrial zones

KUALA LUMPUR: The mother was frantic. Just a moment before, her young child – wearing a swim ring float – was happily playing in the pool, but a blink was all it took for the boy to topple over.

The woman could only scream for help as she could not swim. Other adults around the pool screamed along.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Fortunately, tragedy was averted. Tan Jian Yongs father, a former swimming instructor who happened to be passing by, jumped into the pool and saved the kid.

The incident happened in 2018 in a condominium where Tan, a former swimmer representing the Johor state, lived.

Happy Fish focuses on toddler and baby swimming classes. (Photo: Foong Li Mei)

Tan is now the founder and CEO of Happy Fish Swim School, an indoor academy focusing on swimming programmes for babies and toddlers.

Advertisement

Advertisement

First opened in Singapore in 2007, Happy Fish Swim School has waded into the Klang Valley in Selangor where a wave of indoor swimming schools have appeared over the past few years in seemingly unlikely places – commercial shop lots and light industrial zones.

READ: An Indonesian motorbike racer lost his leg in a crash. Now he is gunning for Paralympic glory

Like Tan, a few founders whom CNA spoke to said they were rattled by the high drowning rate among children in the country.

According to the Department of Statistics, accidental drowning and submersion is the third highest killer of those aged between 0 and 14 at a rate of 2.8 per cent in 2018, after pneumonia and transport accidents.

Their hope is that large bodies of water – including pools at condominiums or hotels – will no longer swallow young lives if children are adept at swimming.

MOVING INDOOR

Conventionally, swimming lessons in Malaysia are conducted at readily-available pools in public facilities like sports stadiums, or private premises like condominiums.

Yet most of these pools are outdoor, where the tropical climate poses complications.

Many parents balk at the idea of their little ones exposing themselves to the harsh sunlight or swimming in chilly water. This leaves a small window for swimming lessons that gets even tighter during the rainy season.

The pool in Wave Glider is built on a raised platform. (Photo: Foong Li Mei)

But having a roof over the head may not make things easier as well. Kenny Ong, who used to teach at a sheltered sports stadium, pointed out that families frolicking in the public pool were distracting for the class.

“These days, we have another annual season – haze. Children are not allowed to go out. I remember that hit the business of swimming instructors pretty badly. It affected our income for about a month,” Ong, who now runs the Wave Glider Swim School in a light industrial zone in Subang Jaya, said.

For Mark Chua, it is the shoddy cleanliness and maintenance at public pools that get to him the most. The former national swimmer and his sister, Marilyn – who competed in the Olympics – were conducting swimming lessons at a public pool in Shah Alam but were appalled at the dirty toilets and changing rooms.

Co-founder of Supersharkz Mark Chua. (Photo: Foong Li Mei)

Following a clash over the cleanliness issues, the siblings had a rude awakening that their business was at the mercy of the pool management. They eventually decided to open Supersharkz Swim School in 2011.

Their first outlet was in a shop lot in Puchong, then another in a light industrial area in Kota Damansara. The environment, cleanliness and maintenance of the indoor facility would be entirely their call – a sense of control that similarly drove Tan and Ong to run their own outfits too.

HIGH COST TO BUILD INDOOR POOL

Building a pool is an expensive endeavour, and it is even more so building an indoor pool that is salt-chlorinated – kinder to the skin than the usual chlorine – and temperature-controlled in premises not meant to support it.

For visibility, Tan opened Happy Fish schools primarily at shop lots and shopping malls. He believed that these foot traffic hotspots meant more people could see the classes in action through its windows, which would spur sign-ups.

Happy Fish at Sunway Pyramid occupies a standalone structure in front of the mall. (Photo: Foong Li Mei)

There is one problem – the floors of these commercial lots need to be reinforced to support swimming pools.

“The floor load of most shopping malls can only take 5 kilonewton, which means it would only support a very shallow pool of 0.5m,” he said.

All in all, a Happy Fish outlet can cost RM1 million (US$239,000) to build, he said.

For Ong, the weight and size of the pool was why he chose a light industrial lot to build Wave Glider. It is more spacious than a shop lot, and comes with heavy duty flooring.

That said, municipal laws do not allow the floors to be dug, so he built a raised platform that would fit his 1.2m-deep pool. Overall, it cost him about RM400,000 to RM600,000 to set up the academy.

READ: Pools shut? No worries. Argentinian paralympic swimmer builds DIY pool with plastic bag

Chua had to learn the costly way to design his pool area. In a previous Supersharkz outlet in Puchong, he had to pay for numerous repairs when the neighbouring lot – a government office – complained of peeling walls.

After some investigation, it turned out that the culprit was not the pool, but the un-tiled walls above the pool. The moisture from the water condensation had seeped into the wall, causing the paint to peel.

He eventually shifted the outlet to a nearby semi-industrial lot that he purchased, which allowed him more freedom to renovate the building into a swimming academy.

The walls at the pool area of Supersharkz is fully tiled to prevent moisture from seeping through the walls and affect the neighbours. (Photo: Foong Li Mei)

“The problem in Malaysia is that there is no guideline to build an indoor swimming pool,” said Chua. “Marilyn and I had to take up pool management courses from America and Australia.”

Other operators agree that with the lack of clear guidelines, safety and hygiene measures in the swimming schools often depend on the managements own initiatives.

READ: Off the beaten path – Niche lodgings beckon domestic travellers in post-lockdown Malaysia

Some schools do go the extra mile. Tee Meng Kui, the managing director of Happy Fish in Malaysia, said all of its schools test pool water quality monthly as is required in Singapore, even though Malaysia does not demand it.

“We are not here to answer to the government. We are here to answer to our customers, the parents,” Tan said.

COMPLIANCE OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT RULES

That being said, swimming academies are not exactly freestyling as there are some municipal regulations to follow.

According to Lee Jen Uyin, a councillor for Subang Jaya City Council, operators who wish to open a swimming school in light industrial lots will have to first apply for planning approval, and plenty of conditions will be imposed “because public safety is our priority”.

“The approval will only be valid for two to three years, after which the operators will have to renew it. If we receive complaints from the neighbours about these academies, or find that they have caused traffic issues or other conflicts that cannot be resolved, the operators would have problems with renewal,” she explained, adding that the business will have to apply for a yearly trade licence as well.

Supersharkz – Students listening to their swimming instructor at Supersharkz. (Photo: Foong Li Mei)

In an email response, the licensing department of the Petaling Jaya City Council (MBPJ) saiRead More – Source

[contf]
[contfnew]

channel news asia

[contfnewc]
[contfnewc]

Related Articles

Asia

Joshua Wong and fellow activists plead guilty in Hong Kong protests trial

bbc– Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong and two fellow campaigners are...

Asia

Works worth Rs 1,559 cr completed in Bihar out of PM s package of Rs 1.25 lakh cr: Congress

PATNA: Congress general secretary Randeep Surjewala on Tuesday claimed that works worth...

Asia

Ex-Trump fundraiser pleads guilty to illicit lobbying on 1MDB, China

WASHINGTON: A former top fundraiser for President Donald Trump pleaded guilty Tuesday...

Asia

Covid: Delhi more “open” than Mumbai

NEW DELHI: With Unlock 5.0 underway from October 15, more businesses and...