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From Big Box to Big Splash: Spearfish SRAC

  • Jan 4
  • 2 min read

Updated: Jan 5

One of the many ways to redefine large, abandoned commercial surfaces—such as shopping malls—is to repurpose them for the sports, recreation, and community sectors. A key advantage of these sectors is their ability to adapt to any space, shape, or surface area.


Busy outdoor aquatic center with pools, slides, and umbrellas. Families and kids play. Text: Spearfish Community Aquatic Center.
Image courtesy of: OLCDesign

An iconic example of this is the Big Box Store formerly owned by Walmart, located in Spearfish, South Dakota. In 2008, this massive space was transformed into a large sports complex and water park, renamed the Spearfish Rec & Aquatic Center (SRAC). It offers services such as party zones, meeting rooms, family reunions, school programs, physical education classes, sports activities, skating, pool parties, and much more.


Architectural Transformation

This Big Box Store was originally a physically massive retail outlet belonging to the well-known chain found throughout the United States. These general merchandise retailers differ from traditional department stores and feature distinct architectural characteristics:

  • Large, self-supporting cubic structures.

  • Expansive single floors made of concrete slabs.

  • Flat roofs with exposed concrete or metal beams, giving them a "warehouse" appearance.

  • Exterior walls made of coated concrete, masonry, or exposed concrete.

  • Location in the center of vast paved parking lots, designed specifically for vehicle accessibility rather than pedestrians.


From Retail to Recreation

Where shelves once stood, there is now a sports area featuring basketball courts, a gym, and supporting services like offices, locker rooms/bathrooms, and a dining area. The indoor sports area covers 7,000 square meters, fitting perfectly into the "Big Box" footprint.

However, the most unique part of this project is found outside: the 8,000-square-meter parking lot was transformed into a large water park featuring slides, pools, and diving boards, all set on a grassy surface surrounded by natural hills.

Impact and Success


The creation of this water park allowed the entire system to flourish. Although the project cost $11.5 million, it recorded over 30,000 visitors in its first four months alone. Thanks to this new economic model, the old Walmart has been forgotten—partly because there are no visual references to what it was before. Today, it stands as a successful intervention that revitalized an area that otherwise would have suffered from significant urban decay.



The Context of E-commerce

This Big Box Store, like many others in the U.S., fell victim to the rise of e-commerce and the shift toward online shopping, which has had a dramatic impact on physical stores and malls. However, Walmart was not caught unprepared; the company evolved by entering the e-commerce market and relaunching its physical stores with much smaller dimensions, serving as a sort of "showroom" for its online business. In fact, a Walmart store is still operational in the city of Spearfish today.


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Great design bridges past and future, creating spaces that evolve with us.

Our built environment is in a constant state of beautiful evolution. At Forma, we believe that architecture and design are deeply personal—they dictate how we live, grow, and connect across every stage of life. As a community of designers, architects, engineers, trades, builders, suppliers, students and creators, we are constantly tasked with bridging what was with what will be. Whether we are exploring innovative new builds, thoughtful restorations, or the visionary people shaping our industry, our mission remains the same: to look beyond the aesthetics. We invite you to explore the human stories woven into the brick, light, and landscapes of the spaces we inhabit. Thank you to everyone who reads, contributes, and shares in this vision.

Giuseppe Gutta
Founder of Forma The Magazine

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