The story of swimming – Outdoor Swimming Society
Established in 1919 in a flooded limestone quarry, Henleaze Swimming Club was absolutely of its time. Sited in the middle of a newly developing, affluent suburb of Bristol, this open-air swimming club was considered progressive because it was open to women members from the start. The club was, in part, a response to the public appetite for... See more
New book celebrates 100 years of Henleaze Swimming Club – Outdoor Swimming Society
A pool gathers water, and to pool is to collect. […] There needs to be some flow for the pool to keep from stagnating, otherwise it would be called a pond; bathing in ponds, swamps, or bogs is different. A swimming pool holds enough water for people to frolic in, move their limbs, float, or race back and forth. A great deal of effort is made to
... See moreIn 1937, the LCC leader Herbert Morrison planned to make London “a city of Lidos”. This ambition was squashed by the Second World War (1939–1945), which forced a change of priorities. Later, under Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s, London’s councils were pressured to cut costs. Lidos steadily disappeared. In 1950, Greater London had 70... See more
London’s lidos are swimming in history
Known as Brixton Beach to some locals, Brockwell Lido was one of several lidos designed by architects from the London County Council’s (LCC) Parks Department. It was a modernist, more hygienic replacement for the park’s Victorian swimming lake. The lido was closed for several years in the 1990s until a local campaign revived it. In 2001, the... See more
London’s lidos are swimming in history
When it opened in 1932, London Fields helped set a new standard for lidos, with changing rooms, a filtration system and a cafe. The lido was closed in 1988, and squatters soon moved in. It would have been demolished had campaigners not stepped up to save it. Eventually, in 2004, Hackney Council decided to revive the lido. It’s been enormously... See more