This Popular NYC Bathhouse Is Opening a Massive New Brooklyn Location-With an Outdoor Pool, Saunas, and Thermal Rooms
Briefly

This Popular NYC Bathhouse Is Opening a Massive New Brooklyn Location-With an Outdoor Pool, Saunas, and Thermal Rooms
"The new Bathhouse Atlantic Avenue location, which will open in the shadow of the Barclays Center, will boast three indoor thermal pools, an outdoor pool, and four indoor thermal rooms. It will also house an outdoor sauna set within a backyard space that will open this summer, allowing visitors to move between hot and cold experiences, the company exclusively told Travel + Leisure."
"Nestled between the charming neighborhoods of Boerum Hill, Downtown Brooklyn, Fort Greene, Prospect Heights, and Park Slope, the Atlantic Avenue location features a game-changing 5,000 square feet of outdoor space, plus a more than 1,100-square-foot sauna handmade from alder wood in Europe that was re-assembled in Brooklyn. But the design was inspired by another neighborhood a bit further away: Mexico City's Polanco, drawing on warm tones and subtle pops of color."
"With an eye toward relaxation, the space is ensconced in moody, strategically-placed lighting that perfectly sets the tone with large, 50-foot murals by local Brooklyn artist Mu Pan welcoming visitors."
"“We know where our customers come from, and that part of Brownstone Brooklyn was such a natural fit,” Jason Goodman, the co-founder of Bathhouse, told T+L, adding, “So we wanted to do something that was convenient and accessible to that really rich neighborhood.”"
Bathhouse is opening a 32,000-square-foot location at 540 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn on May 16. The new site includes three indoor thermal pools, an outdoor pool, and four indoor thermal rooms. It also features an outdoor sauna in a backyard space planned to open this summer, designed to let visitors move between hot and cold experiences. The property adds 5,000 square feet of outdoor space and includes a more than 1,100-square-foot sauna handmade from alder wood in Europe and reassembled in Brooklyn. The design uses warm tones and subtle color accents inspired by Mexico City’s Polanco, with moody lighting and large 50-foot murals by Brooklyn artist Mu Pan.
Read at Aol
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]