Vulkanbad Mendig

Mendig

Mendig volcanic bath
Laachgraben
56743 Mendig

The city of Mendig has an attractive and varied leisure pool. The original bathroom dates from the 1930s.
After a competition in which the citizens could choose the name of their swimming pool, the name "Vulkanbad Mendig" was chosen by a majority.
The quietly landscaped volcanic bath with many trees and surrounded by a stream is on the northern edge of Mendig. (Laachgraben)

The Vulkanbad Mendig has the following individual facilities:
- Swimming pool 15 x 25 m
- Non-swimmer pool 20 x 11 m
- Children's pool 2 x 50 square meters, separated by a water slide
- Wide water slide with a length of approx. 11.50 m
- 1 m and 3 m diving tower
- 4 starting blocks
- Disabled-friendly walk-through pool
- Large green area
- Disabled toilet
- Mother and child area
- First aid room
- kiosk
- covered cafeteria
- children's playground
- Beach chairs

You can find out entrance fees on the homepage www.mendig.de, search for "swimming pool".
The volcanic pool in Mendig is available again in the summer season.
Info phone: 02652-52438
mehr lesen

Share content:

At a glance

Opening hours

  • From May 11th to September 14th
    Monday
    10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

    Tuesday
    10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

    Wednesday
    10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

    Thursday
    10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

    Friday
    10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

    Saturday
    10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

    Sunday
    10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

Place

Mendig

Contact

Vulkanbad Mendig
Laachgraben
56743 Mendig
Phone: (0049) 0 2652-52438

Bitte akzeptieren Sie den Einsatz aller Cookies, um den Inhalt dieser Seite sehen zu können.

Alle Cookies Freigeben

Plan your journey

per Google Maps

You might also be interested in

Laacher See mit Abtei Maria Laach, © Eifel Tourismus GmbH, Dominik Ketz

Laacher See

With around 3.3 km² and a depth of 53 m, Laacher See is the largest lake in Rhineland-Palatinate. The area around the lake has been a nature reserve for almost 80 years. The last eruption of the former “Laacher volcano” occurred around 10,930 BC. B.C., about 13,000 years ago. Traces of volcanic activity can still be found in the form of volcanic outgassing, the so-called mofettes, on the eastern shore of the lake. The total ejection quantity of the outbreak at that time was about 16 km³. The eruption was one and a half times as strong as that of Pinatubo in 1991, or 6 times as strong as the eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980. Although Laacher See is widely regarded as the largest maar in the Vulkaneifel, it is scientifically not a maar and also not a real crater lake, but a water-filled caldera - a burglary crater that resulted from a collapse after the magma chamber was emptied below the volcanic cone. The volcanic mountain collapses and only the ring bead on the outer edge remains. Over time, the remaining boiler fills up with water. The Laacher See is in the Eifel, next to the neighboring Wehrer Kessel, the largest caldera and the only water-filled one in Central Europe.