World Aquatics Championship

World-Class Infrastructure in Singapore 2025

Innovation under pressure

Car park to championship arena, six months

When Singapore was selected to host the prestigious World Aquatics Championships in 2025, the engineering challenge was unprecedented: transform multiple venues across the island into world-class aquatic facilities capable of hosting 2,500 elite athletes from nearly 200 countries—all in under six months.

For KIN, this represented our most ambitious and technically demanding project to date. What emerged was not just successful event infrastructure, but a testament to Singapore’s engineering excellence and our company’s ability to deliver the impossible under pressure.

2000+

Athletes

300+

Broadcasters from over 20 countries

280+

Hours of live coverage in 11 languages

125+

Cameras across 5 venues

Engineering the impossible

Client

World Aquatics Championship 2025 Organising Committee

Date

July 11, 2025

Location

Singapore Sports Hub and Palawan Beach, Sentosa

Singapore hosted the World Aquatics Championships 2025: 2,500 athletes, nearly 200 countries, three venues. KIN built the arena, Southeast Asia's first high diving tower, and broadcast centre in six months.

Three Venues, One Vision

The centrepiece was a 250,000 sq ft car park next to Leisure Park Kallang, converted into the WCH Arena in six months. Its competition pool — 50m long, 26m wide, 3m deep, holding 3.9 million litres — was engineered to reduce turbulence and optimise conditions for world-record performances. Around 4,800 spectators were accommodated with optimised sightlines and 177 metres of LED screens, including a 29-metre screen on the south wall.

At Palawan Green, Sentosa, KIN constructed Southeast Asia's first high diving tower — a 37-metre temporary structure built on a 21-tonne steel foundation comprising 108 precision-manufactured curved panels secured by 6,400 bolts. Panel expansion was monitored to the millimetre as the pool filled. Singapore's tropical climate added pressure: UV-tinted film, additional cooling, and specialised chemical treatments were deployed to keep the venue competition-ready.

Broadcasting to the World

Perhaps the most complex challenge was building a fully functional International Broadcast Centre inside OCBC Arena Hall in just 1.5 weeks — handling live coverage from all venues and broadcasting to 150 territories worldwide. KIN installed precision air conditioning for sensitive equipment, engineered STC40-rated soundproof walls, and implemented double-layer tempered glass panels to maintain visual connectivity without compromising audio quality. Dual synchronised generators ensured zero downtime, while custom cable tray systems and high-speed fibre linked all venues to the central hub.

Logistics and Environmental Care

Installing gangways for the open water swimming venue required a coordinated 2 AM operation with police and ranger escorts to navigate Sentosa's spatial and environmental constraints. KIN worked closely with Sentosa Development Corporation to protect resident trees with complex root systems, designing around natural features rather than removing them.

The Results

More than 125 cameras, 280 hours of live coverage in 11 languages, and 300+ broadcast professionals from 20 countries — including NBC and CCTV — delivered the event to a global audience. High diving sessions sold out entirely. The Championships demonstrated KIN's ability to deliver mission-critical infrastructure, on impossible timelines, when the world is watching.

Services Provided

Venue Overlay Planning
Venue Overlay Planning
Design & Build
Design & Build
Logistics, Operation & Furnishing
Logistics, Operation & Furnishing
Audio-Visual Systems
Audio-Visual Systems

KIN Targets

  • To create a world-class aquatic facility capable of hosting the world's top swim athletes
  • To construct Southeast Asia's first-ever high diving tower standing at 37m tall
  • To build a fully functional International Broadcast Centre

Championship in your city?
Let’s plan it.