CM Mann Dedicates Rs 9.50 Cr Olympic Pool to Sangrur
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Punjab announced on Thursday, 2 July 2026 that Chief Minister Bhagwant Singh Mann dedicated an Olympic-standard swimming pool to the residents of Sangrur, built at a cost of Rs 9.50 crore.
Context
Speaking at the inauguration, CM Bhagwant Singh Mann said the facility would emerge as a 'nursery' for Asian, World, and Olympic champions. The pool meets international competitive standards, positioning Sangrur — a district in central Punjab — as a serious hub for aquatic sports training at the grassroots level.
The original Punjabi post read: 'ਇਹ ਸਵੀਮਿੰਗ ਪੂਲ ਏਸ਼ੀਅਨ, ਵਰਲਡ ਅਤੇ ਓਲੰਪਿਕ ਚੈਂਪੀਅਨਾਂ ਲਈ ਨਰਸਰੀ ਬਣ ਕੇ ਉਭਰੇਗਾ' ('This swimming pool will emerge as a nursery for Asian, World and Olympic champions').
Policy Backdrop
Since winning the 2022 Punjab assembly elections, the Aam Aadmi Party government under Mann has prioritised district-level sports infrastructure as part of a broader youth development agenda. The Sangrur pool is one of several such projects the administration has announced and executed across the state.
This investment aligns with a national trend accelerated by the expansion of the Khelo India programme in 2017, under which state governments have raced to build international-standard venues to strengthen India's medal pipeline at Asian Games and Olympic events. States such as Haryana, Maharashtra, and Gujarat have pursued similar district-level facility upgrades. Punjab, with its long history of producing elite athletes across multiple disciplines, is now extending that tradition to competitive swimming.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries are young swimmers and aspiring athletes in Sangrur district and the surrounding region, who previously lacked access to an Olympic-specification pool without travelling to larger cities. District-level sports bodies and coaches are expected to use the facility for structured training programmes and selection trials.
An Olympic-standard pool — measuring 50 metres in length with regulation lane configurations — allows athletes to train under the same conditions they would encounter at national championships and international competitions, a significant advantage for talent development at the grassroots level.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to whether swimmers trained at the Sangrur facility make an impact at upcoming national aquatic championships, which would validate the state's infrastructure-first approach to sports development. Further state budget allocations for similar facilities in other Punjab districts remain a key variable to watch as the Mann government continues its push to expand sports infrastructure beyond the traditional strongholds.