WILLIAM WEST/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Bondi Baths have been a landmark feature of Bondi Beach in Sydney for over 100 years.
Ryan Pierse/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
The iconic pools are open to the public year-round, and include a 50 meter swimming pool and a smaller children's pool.
Brett Boardman Photography
At this year's Venice Biennale, the Australian Institute of Architects has constructed The Pool, an exhibition looking at the the role the pool plays in national culture.
Brett Boardman Photography
The highlight of the exhibition is a 60 square meter pool by the Centre for Appropriate Technology. The colors are meant to "reflect the colors of Australia's center."
courtesy ballymore
The London Sky Pool is a work in progress by Arup Associates. The aquarium-like swimming pool will be suspended 10-stories high between two buildings.
courtesy ballymore
The project was approved in August last year by city officials.
MARTIN BERNETTI/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
The world's largest pool is this saltwater artificial lagoon by MGA Architects.
MARTIN BERNETTI/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
It is located in the San Alfonso Del Mar resort in Chile, and stretches over 3,000 feet long.
Hufton + Crow
The London Aquatics Centre by the late Zaha Hadid features three different pools. It was created as part of the London Olympics in 2012.
Hufton + Crow
The pools are now open to the public.
Hufton + Crow
"Architecture should add to the drama of an event," Jim Heverin, project director of the London Aquatics Centre previously told CNN.
Courtesy Marina Bay Sands
The Marina Bay Sands hotel in Singapore features an infinity pool at its rooftop.
Courtesy Marina Bay Sands
It is located 57 stories above ground level.
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The city's skyline is visible from the pool.
Courtesy OPA
This house, to be built into a cliff, is a concept by OPA Architects. It features a swimming pool as its rooftop that doubles as a natural light resource.
Courtesy OPA
Renderings of the home went viral, and its popularity on the internet resulted in the project getting financed. It's construction will now move ahead in Lebanon.
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This swimming pool by Hawkins/Brown features a roof made out of timber.
courtesy hawkins/brown
Wood is increasingly becoming a popular material for construction.
Héléne Binet Londn/courtesy Mikou Studio Paris
This pool incorporates Feng Shui philosophy into its design.
Héléne Binet Londn/courtesy Mikou Studio Paris
Feng Shui is a traditional Chinese concept that considers how spatial arrangement affects energy.
CNN  — 

Venice isn’t known for its lack of water, but on Thursday there will be even more available to visitors at the city’s famed architecture biennale – the most important architectural event on the calendar.

Australia’s new Denton Corker Marshall-designed pavilion will host The Pool, an installation featuring a 60 meter square pool and a multisensory experience inspired by a national love affair.

Created by urban designers Michelle Tabet, Amelia Holliday and Isabelle Toland, The Pool seeks to explore the social function of swimming pools within contemporary Australia, while paying homage to millennia-old traditions from indigenous culture.

Brett Boardman Photography
Australian Pavilion -- The Pool

“From our perspective the pool was always a spatial design, a spatial experience that can contain a lot of contradictions and a lot of meaning,” says Tabet, talking to CNN as the last preparations are made ahead of Thursday’s opening.

“We knew it was a symbol of affluence and also a symbol of necessity; something that could be public and private. We knew it was the kind of thing that could be natural and manmade. Just instinctively there were a lot of layers of rich meaning embedded in that object of the pool.”

The installation seeks to reflect these variables with a deeply contemporary pool (mirrored surfaces and reflections abound), paired with a bespoke percussive soundtrack and scents reminiscent of the Australian Bush. With room for 99 people and shallow enough to accommodate even the youngest visitors, inclusivity is at the fore.

“[The swimming pool] is one of Australia’s fundamental public spaces,” says Tabet. “It’s is a place where people come together; they’re equal, they’re level. The sun shines the same on you whether you’re the prime minister or a student… That’s a really interesting proposition for architecture.”

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The world's largest swimming pool is in San Alfonso Del Mar by MGA Architects.

The egalitarian nature of public pools was clearly a draw for Tabet, who argues the pool serves as a proxy, “a platform for people to tell their stories.”

“This project,” she says, “has become a discussion about architecture and the public.”

Tabet and her colleagues received anecdotes from social media and approached high-profile Australians from Olympian Ian Thorpe to bestselling novelist Christos Tsiolkas, weaving interviews into a soundtrack she describes as “a very intimate experience.” Voices will emerge from individual speakers dotted around the room. Thorpe speaks about his relationship between body and water; Tsiolkas muses on the pool as a space for self-discovery.

Brett Boardman Photography
The 60 meter square pool at the heart of the Australian exhibition.

The spiritual function of water will also be explored. On Thursday morning, a water ceremony will be performed by an Aboriginal elder in a ritual that Tabet says “communes the Venice water with the Australian pavilion’s waters.”

“Each different element is acknowledged and recognized and celebrated, whether it’s earth or air or fire or water. It’s really about the coming together of dreams.”

Tabet suggests this element sets apart Australia’s relationship with water compared to Europe.

David von Blohn/AP
The water levels of a reservoir in Mexico have subsided to reveal the remains of an ancient church: the Temple of Santiago, also known as the Temple of Quechula.
David von Blohn/AP
The church was built by monks who were headed by Bartolome de la Casas, a Dominican Friar.
David von Blohn/AP
When the monks first arrived, the area was inhabited by the Zoque people, an indigenous group from Mexico.
David von Blohn/AP
According to Carlos Navarete -- an architect who worked with Mexican authorities to report on the structure -- the church was built under the assumption that the area would be highly populated. "It was a church built thinking that this could be a great population center, but it never achieved that."
David von Blohn/AP
Instead, the project was abandoned halfway through the building process. According to Navarete, this was due to the spread of the plague during 1773-1776.
David von Blohn/AP
The area was then flooded in 1966 when a dam for the nearby Nezahualcoyotl reservoir was built.
David von Blohn/AP
Due to a recent drought in the area, water levels have dropped 82 feet, to reveal the underwater structure.
David von Blohn/AP
The church itself is 183 feet long and 42 feet wide, with walls as high as 30 feet. The church's bell tower is 48 meters above ground.
David von Blohn/AP
This is the second time a drop in the reservoir's water levels has revealed the temple since it was submerged in 1966. In 2002, the water levels dropped so low that visitors could easily walk inside the church.

“It’s cultural, it’s climatic, it’s a completely different engagement with landscape and resources in Australia,” she says. “It’s very specific to a culture which dates back millennia in indigenous history. So whilst there is water in every country, there is a particular framework in which Australian culture thinks and conceptualizes water.”

“It’s kind of the case that the object of the pool chose us,” says Tabet of the team’s experience since their concept was selected in April 2015. “It’s going to be so great. It’s going to be something else, I think.”