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There's a secret pool somewhere in the Mojave desert

And it's no mirage.

Christopher Hooton
Monday 18 April 2016 16:08 BST
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Somewhere in the 47,877 square mile Mojave desert exists an 11-by-5-foot pool. Amid the arid landscape it is filled with cool, clean water and is available for anyone to use, but first you have to find it.

Social Pool is an art installation created in 2014 by Austrian artist Alfredo Barsuglia and maintained by its visitors, who must first go to the MAK Centre for Art and Architecture in West Hollywood and pick up one of four keys and a set of GPS coordinates.

It might be a lot of effort to go to to laze by a pool, but that’s exactly the point.

"The idea is that it all starts the moment you pick up the key,” Barsuglia told the Los Angeles Times. “You then have the experience of getting there: of maybe sitting in traffic, of the walk in the desert, of enjoying the pool if you find it, then returning the key to the MAK Center. That is all part of the project."

He added that the installation was “about the effort people make to reach a luxury good," and how they choose to treat it.

You might expect the pool to have been trashed, but thus far it remains well kept by guests.

“I don't think that someone takes the effort to visit the pool to destroy it,” the artist told LAist (sic). “Yes, I trust the participants, but as I mentioned before, if someone comes to destroy the work, it's sad but part of the project—of letting the project develop by itself, without my or anybody's influence.

“To sit in the pool and watch the scenery is outstanding. I think it's so nice that nobody would conceive the idea to damage it, but to prevent it for the next visitor. But you never know… we will see."

I guess it's just as well he didn't build it in Britain.

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