Wednesday 29 June 2011
Hampstead Lido (Parliament Hill)
When people think of swimming and Hampstead Heath they usually think of the famous Hampstead Ponds; those rather muddy patches of popular summer water perhaps more renowned for it's poseurs and nude sun bathers than swimmers. Much forgotten, and largely hidden behind walls just south of the Parliament Hill athletics track, lies the true glory of Heath swimming: a huge, and rather splendidly maintained open air swimming pool.
Can't place it? Here is what it looks like from above:
Google Map Aerial Photo
Built in 1938 with a distinct Art Deco look to the place. Rather than being run by the local council, the Heath's sporting facilities fall under the remit of the wealthy and esteemed Corporation of London (who apparently own Hampstead Heath). So next time you are cursing the greed of Bankers you can at least console yourself that their business rates are least paying for the upkeep of wonderful places like the Lido - that one suspects could not sustain themselves on the low revenues of passing swimmers.
The pool is a whopping 61m x 27m - effectively bigger than an Olympic size pool. It is an unheated pool with a slightly strange stainless steel lining (to retain heat perhaps?). You can swim here everyday during the Summer months of May to September. In the winter the pool remains open to hardy morning swimmers prepared to brave the chill. On Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays there are cheap (£2) evening swims which seem popular with a wetsuited triathlon crowd doing endless training lengths of freestyle crawl. Go on a warm weekend and you will find is a mix of kids, families and sunbathers who spread themselves on the sun-warmed clay and benches surrounding the waters and generally laze about. Morning swims are so popular the swimmers are request to swim widths rather than length - the Urban Swimmer is not really a "morning person" so he has yet to experience this.
There is a splendid little day time cafe serving cups of tea and sandwiches; and a spectacularly ugly fountain the bubbles away for no good reason. The showers are always hot and the changing rooms at time of writing had just been given a new lick of paint.
It hard to swim at the Lido and not come away with a warm glow. This is not just because of the jolt to your circulation that a cold water swim will give you, but the general ambiance of good will that the place exudes. The staff are chirpy and the regulars cheerful. I have swum here on warm sun filled days surrounded my laughing teens and rainy overcast rainy evenings where I and a duck have been practically the only swimmers - and every time the place lifts my spirits. This is the start of my swims and if you only ever swim in one London pool it should be this one. Much like London Zoo, if you are a Londoner and haven't been here, you really should.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment