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Swimming in the world's city rivers and harbours 'Should be a right'
The Guardian
|June 28, 2025
Swimming in urban waterways should be a right, activists have said, as an international alliance aims to persuade politicians to clean up rivers so they can be used safely.
At the world's first Swimmable Cities summit in Rotterdam, more than 200 representatives from over 20 countries gathered and plunged into a local swimming spot that was once an industrial port.
The Swimmable Cities alliance was formed in response to the Seine clean-up for the 2024 Paris Olympics. The summit aims to build on this work and progress made in other European cities to create a global network of swimmable urban waterways.
The setting itself showed what can be possible: Rotterdam's Rijnhaven, once an industrial port on the south bank of the Nieuwe Maas, is now a designated swimming area with a floating pontoon park, and the only legal place to swim in central Rotterdam. Locals come for evening swims or lunchtime dips; children leap in and play. During the summit, conversations took place in swimsuits.
Dit verhaal komt uit de June 28, 2025-editie van The Guardian.
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