Axios Columbus

July 23, 2024
Happy Tuesday!
🌦️ Today's weather: Partly sunny, with pop-up storms possible later in the day. High near 86.
⛽ Fuel our journalism — become an Axios Columbus member today.
⚽ Situational awareness: Soccer superstar Lionel Messi won't be available for tomorrow's MLS All-Star Game at Lower.com Field as he continues to recover from an injury, the league confirmed yesterday.
- Looking for a local watch party? We've got details below.
Today's newsletter is 793 words — a 3-minute read.
1 big thing: New aquatics center proposed
Columbus Recreation and Parks and Columbus City Schools are working on a plan to build a new indoor aquatics center connected to a school on the Northeast Side.
Why it matters: Just one of the city's eight pools is indoors — the Columbus Aquatics Center in the Short North — and it's "reaching the end of its usable life," per a 2023 city-commissioned report.
Flashback: That Legat Architects report found Columbus has many "aquatic deserts" because its pool portfolio hasn't grown alongside its population.
- It recommended a school partnership as one solution and said a new indoor pool should be a "high priority."
- The city most recently added two pools in 1970, when its population was 41% smaller, per the Dispatch.
The latest: The Columbus Board of Education in June approved a non-binding letter expressing "mutual intent to engage in a collaborative effort," which outlined potential district land transfers and lease agreements.
- The earliest construction is expected to begin is 2026, per the document.
Zoom in: The project's proposed site currently houses Mifflin Middle School, Cassady Alternative Elementary School and the Howard Community Center. The aquatics center would go on nearby green space and connect to a new community center.
- The long-term plan includes the district constructing a new middle school connected to the centers, plus a separate elementary school nearby.
- All existing buildings would close.
- The city would also build and maintain a new track, athletic fields and expanded park area on the campus.

Follow the money: The anticipated budget for a new indoor pool facility is $50-75 million, per the city's 2023 report. The district estimates the two new schools would cost it about $76.4 million, with expected additional costs covered by the state, a spokesperson tells Axios.
What they're saying: School board member Sarah Ingles called the idea a "huge opportunity for our district" at the June meeting.
Reality check: The district would first need to secure funding for the project, so nothing is officially proposed yet, the spokesperson says.
- The conversations are separate from the district's ongoing discussions about consolidating existing buildings.
What we're watching: A Recreation and Parks spokesperson told Axios that more information will become available "in the coming weeks."
2. Charted: Columbus' pool problem


In a survey of over 2,400 Columbus residents, crowding was the No. 1 reported barrier preventing pool use, per the city's 2023 report.
Context: The National Recreation and Park Association recommends two pools per every 100,000 people, per the report, but Columbus has just half that many.
3. Nutshells: Your local news roundup
A Zanesville semitruck driver faces 26 criminal charges related to the fiery chain-reaction crash that killed six people last year in Licking County. He is due in court today. (Dispatch)
🏒 The struggling Blue Jackets named a new head coach yesterday: Dean Evason, most recently the head coach of the Minnesota Wild.
- He's the third person to fill the role in the past four years. (The Athletic)
📕 J.D. Vance's memoir, "Hillbilly Elegy," is back on Amazon's bestseller book list, with sales skyrocketing since he became former President Trump's running mate. (Axios)
🥪 Melt Bar & Grilled has closed its last local location amid a bankruptcy filing and a lawsuit over missed rent payments to Easton. (614 Magazine)
4. ⚽ Where to watch the All-Star Game
The MLS All-Star Game kicks off at Lower.com Field tomorrow at 8pm.
Here's where to watch the MLS' best for free if you aren't headed to the stadium:
🍺 See it on the big screen in Land-Grant's beer garden while drinking Glory, a Crew-themed brew.
- 8pm, 424 W. Town Street.
🥳 Play Nordecke bingo at Endeavor Brewing and Spirits to win free swag before kickoff.
- 6:30pm, 909 W. 5th Ave.
🎰 Get a $25 gift card to Fanatics' online store if you're one of the first 50 people to enter a watch party at Fanatics Sportsbook.
- 6pm, 401 N. Front St.
Plus: Stream the game live exclusively on Apple TV+ MLS Season Pass.
- $13 monthly or $39 per season for current Apple TV+ subscribers.
- $15 monthly or $49 per season for non-subscribers.
The intrigue: One person with a great viewing spot will be Crew head coach Wilfried Nancy, who earned the right to coach the MLS All-Stars after leading Columbus to a 2023 championship.
🤭 Quote du jour
"I'm lucky he's on my team now because he's a pain in the ass when we play against each other."— Nancy on coaching Luciano Acosta, an FC Cincinnati All-Star, during a news conference yesterday.
5. 📸 Photo quiz: If these walls could talk
👋 Alissa here, with another mural mystery for you to solve.
- Do you know where this public art is located?
A hint:
- One of Columbus' many 'burbs,
- This city is Ohio's capital of herbs.
📬 Reply to this newsletter with the correct answer for a chance to win some free Axios swag!
- Check back tomorrow to find out who won.
This newsletter was edited by Lindsey Erdody and copy edited by Kate Sommers-Dawes and Aurora Martínez.
Our picks:
😋 Tyler is reading about the new Ohio State Fair foods!
📖 Alissa is reading "100 Things to Do in Ohio Before You Die."
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