Lakes & Cold Water

Lakeside sauna for cold-water swimming venues.

Wood-fired heat next to cold water: a natural fit for lakes, lidos, watersports venues and open-water swimming communities.

Warm timber interior of a mobile sauna suited to cold-water recovery sessions

A simple loop people understand straight away.

Cold-water swimmers, paddleboarders and watersports guests already know the pull of the water. A sauna gives them somewhere warm to return to and a reason to spend longer at the venue.

The best setups are practical: safe access, sensible flow between water and sauna, clear session management and a site that can handle guests comfortably.

Off-grid. Wood-fired. Built for outdoor venues.

Where a lakeside sauna works best.

Lakes and open-water swimming sites

For venues already running swims, dips, memberships or seasonal sessions.

Watersports venues

For paddleboarding, wakeboarding, kayaking and outdoor activity sites looking to add a warm recovery space after time on the water.

Lidos and cold-water clubs

For communities where heat and cold can become a recurring experience rather than a one-off novelty.

Retreat and wellness sites

For settings that combine water, nature, guided sessions and quiet time outdoors.

Heat and cold only work when the flow is clear.

A lakeside sauna needs more than a nice view. We look at how people arrive, change, move between water and heat, and leave without the venue feeling congested.

01

Safe water access

The venue must already have a sensible approach to open-water use, supervision, boundaries and guest behaviour around the water.

02

Sauna position

The sauna needs a practical place to stand: accessible, stable, away from bottlenecks and close enough to the water to make the loop feel natural.

03

Session flow

Cold-water venues often work best with timed sessions, clear numbers and a simple route between changing, sauna and water.

Have a waterside venue in mind?