By Brad Spiegel
The Wayland Community Pool has long reflected the town’s evolving relationship with public recreation and civic responsibility. What began as a modest municipal pool more than half a century ago has become a year-round regional resource through a unique partnership between the town and a local nonprofit.
The original Town House pool opened in 1969 as a five-lane facility financed privately but later run by the town. By the early 2000s, escalating maintenance costs and operating losses exceeding $100,000 a year prompted officials to consider closing it. In 2005, volunteers and members of the Park and Recreation Commission began exploring how the community could save the pool without burdening taxpayers. Their answer was to form a nonprofit corporation, Wayland Community Pool, Inc., to lease town-owned land for a nominal fee and assume operational control.
That model led to the construction of a new ten-lane, indoor-outdoor facility at 258 Old Connecticut Path, which opened in November 2010. The updated design included a removable winter “bubble” to permit year-round swimming. Since then, the pool has hosted high-school swim and dive teams, youth swim programs, masters workouts, and lessons for hundreds of residents and neighboring communities. It has remained financially independent, relying on user fees and private donations rather than annual municipal appropriations.
Fifteen years later, the aging infrastructure again required major renewal. In 2024 the pool undertook a $1.3 million rehabilitation project to replace plumbing, repair locker rooms, install new starting blocks and bleachers, and update the bubble and air-exchange system. Work proceeded through 2025 while the facility stayed open, with temporary restrooms and changing areas set up on the pool deck.
A key factor in the latest renovation was the town’s participation through the Community Preservation Act. Voters at the 2024 Annual Town Meeting approved Article 25, authorizing up to $326,000 in CPA funds for eligible outdoor recreational components—plumbing, starting blocks, bleachers, and ADA accessibility improvements—on the town-owned site. The balance came from private and corporate gifts coordinated by the nonprofit board.
With construction nearing completion, the pool will mark its rebirth with a ribbon-cutting on Sunday, November 2 at 2 p.m. For many in Wayland, the event represents not just the reopening of a familiar landmark but the continuation of a six-decade community commitment to shared recreation, civic stewardship, and local initiative.the
To contribute to closing the remaining $100,000 funding gap for pool renovation go to
https:/givebutter.com/c/wcpmakingwaves or send a check to the Wayland Community Pool at 195 Concord Road Wayland, MA 01778.
