in Budapest The origins of wave pools go as far back as the 19th century, as famous fantasy castle builder
Ludwig II of Bavaria electrified a lake to create breaking waves. In 1905, the "Undosa" swimming platform was built on Lake Starnberg in Germany, which used large pontoons to force the lake water to make waves. It has since been converted into a restaurant. In 1912, the "Bilzbad" in
Radebeul, Germany, was the first public wave pool built on the ground. It used a wave machine, also called "Undosa," first exhibited the previous year at the
International Hygiene Exhibition in
Dresden. It still operates. Another early public wave pool was designed and built in 1927 in
Budapest,
Hungary, in the known
Gellért Baths, and appeared in one of
James A. Fitzpatrick's documentary
Traveltalks films about the city in 1938, as one of the main tourist attractions. It remains open. The
natatorium at
Bayocean, Oregon, also had an early wave-generating machine, before it was destroyed by natural ocean waves in 1932. A 1929 Pathe Pictorial film featured "Indoor Surfers" frolicking in small, artificially-generated waves in a swimming pool in Munich, Germany. The waves were created by agitators which pushed waves through the diving area and into a shallow area where kids were bodysurfing little waves: "This is the new kind of swimming bath that is becoming the rage of Germany," one of the captions reads. "No more placid waters for bathers - the mechanism behind the netting keeps everything moving." In 1939, a public swimming pool in
Wembley,
London, was equipped with machines that created wavelets to approximate the soothing ebb and flowing motion of the ocean. In the 1940s,
Palisades Amusement Park, located on the
Hudson River Palisades across from
New York City, installed a large waterfall at one end of its salt water pool, the largest of such in the world at the time, which generated small waves much like those in Wembley. In 1966, the "Summerland Wavepool" in
Akiruno,
Japan, was the first wave pool accessible to surfers (though only for 15 minutes every hour). One of three owners of Oceana Park, Miklos Matrai, holds US Patent 3005207, filed on January 13, 1959, and patented on October 24, 1961, which describes a specially constructed swimming pool having means for producing simulated ocean waves. The first indoor wave pool in the United States opened in 1982 at the Bolingbrook Aquatic Center in
Bolingbrook, Illinois. Opened in 1989,
Disney's Typhoon Lagoon is one of the world's largest outdoor wave pools and the strength of the waves makes it possible to
bodysurf. == Operation ==