Anyone have memories of swimming in this legendary pool ? As kids we used it every weekend where we would traipse from Leith to this vastly impressive outdoor swimming arena
I think at the time it was 5p to enter and 2p for your locker in which you had your key in a rubber wrist band, we would normally pocket our bus fares to enable a purchase of a poke of hot chips to help us thaw out. I was never brave enough to tackle the raft or wave machine which was impressive to say the least, preferring to splash about knee deep at the shallow end for safety sake
The Pool fell into a long and controversial decline, with the closure of the power station in 1978 removing what little heat there was for the water. The 1979 season turned out to be the last and demolition was finally approved in 1988
At one point ideas were being floated around with regards Meadowbank Thistle changing use to a football stadium as infrastructure was very much in place but plans never even got to the drawing board stage
The pool, which opened in 1936, was the largest outdoor facility of its kind in Europe. The Pool was enormous; 330 feet long by 150 feet wide – the equivalent of two Olympic sized pools – and varied in depth from one foot to six feet two inches at the deep end. Six thousand spectators could be accommodated, with 2,000 seats available under a cantilevered stand
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Thread: Portobello outdoor swimming pool
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24-08-2023 09:09 AM #1
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Portobello outdoor swimming pool
Last edited by Bridge hibs; 24-08-2023 at 09:15 AM.
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24-08-2023 09:14 AM #2This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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24-08-2023 09:18 AM #3
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I never went near the diving boards, I was a total ***** bag 🤣 it was a great day out though and summer holidays were spent in that pool
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24-08-2023 09:21 AM #4This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
No way would I do now what we did as kids back in the day that's for sure, too feart/wise now
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24-08-2023 09:46 AM #5
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24-08-2023 09:52 AM #6
I have a weird phobia of diving boards, I dream about them pretty much every night and not in a good way.
The old photos of this place fascinate and freak me out.
Am I right in thinking that this was where "the Pitz" is / was?
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24-08-2023 10:05 AM #7
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24-08-2023 10:10 AM #8
There's a small campaign that started from almost a throw away thread on Twitter for a lido at Seafield. I was sceptical at first but by the time I had read the whole thing I was convinced it had to happen. https://twitter.com/gordycarmichael/...40165455822848
The village (really town now) that my wife grew up in down south still has an old lido and it's amazing. Used all year round by a hugely varied clientele.
Too young to remember the old Portobello pool but the pictures always amaze me as to how big it was. It would be great to see some kind of facility in Edinburgh again.PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
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24-08-2023 10:22 AM #9This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I actually just did a little bit of googling and came across a Facebook page called "Portobello Power Station - Compiled By Frank Brash" which has loads of good pictures of the power station and the pool including some excellent aerial shots. You don't seem to need to be on Facebook or to log in to view them.
https://www.facebook.com/frankhbrash/
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24-08-2023 10:34 AM #10
https://www.capitalcollections.org.u...=1692873195843
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24-08-2023 10:37 AM #11
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The fantastic heated (although debateable 🤣) open air swimming pool which the late Sean Connery was a life guard
The spectacular red bricked power station that towered over the pool
The Portobello Potteries with one remaining kiln still existing
The old ancient harbour walls that were exposed when building new housing, yes Portobello had a harbour many decades ago !!
Marine Gardens Stadium that hosted football, speedway, ballroom dancing amongst many other events
How all that has changed now eh
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24-08-2023 10:45 AM #12
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Portobello harbour
The ordinary ebb and flow of coastal sediments at Portobello beach has temporarily exposed the outline of the old harbour and sea walls. Though the existence of the harbour has been well documented – particularly in light of rescue archaeology work undertaken for the Harbour Green residential development – the seaward side is usually covered by sand.
An unusually large winter transport of sediments has revealed the base and masonry of the outer harbour walls, which have not previously been subject to archaeological survey.
The stone harbour was built at the instance of Edinburgh architect and builder William Jameson during 1787-88 in order to sustain the industries that were then mining the clay beds of the Figgate Burn.
As well as providing a limited haven for fishing boats, the harbour was mainly designed to export brick, tile and earthenware goods; it also enabled the import of local coal.
Jameson hired local contractor Alexander Robertson, the lessee of nearby Joppa Quarry, from where the stone was obtained.
The development of the harbour tied the then tiny village of the Portobello into much wider industrial networks, not only within the Forth region but also further afield, with Cornish whiteware clay imported for the local ceramic trade.
As is clear from the exposed outlines, the walls were not thick, storms took their toll and the harbour fell into disuse. The advent of the railway likely provided Portobello’s kilns with alternative access to markets and raw materials.
‘Portobello, in spite of its name, is no seaport’, noted one gazeteer in 1842. It ‘neither has, nor probably ever will have, any sea-ward trade. A small harbour was constructed at the mouth of the Figgate burn, by Mr Jameson, soon after his discovery of the clay bed; but it never was of any use except for boats, and is now completely ruinous.
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24-08-2023 11:05 AM #13
Some interesting information re Portobello here.
https://www.allaboutedinburgh.co.uk/...Puerto%20Bello.
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24-08-2023 12:39 PM #14
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Back to the pool. I loved the waves, the diving boards and the raft but the diving platforms were something I could never do and it was a long time climbing back down 😆
I never once witnessed the water being anything but blumming freezing. I'm surprised the raft wasn't sunk by icebergs!Space to let
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24-08-2023 03:25 PM #15This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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24-08-2023 03:59 PM #16
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24-08-2023 04:46 PM #17This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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"I did not need any persuasion to play for such a great club, the Hibs result is still one of the first I look for"
Sir Matt Busby
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25-08-2023 06:03 AM #18This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-08-2023 06:46 AM #19
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We also spent our bus fares on chips and juice with no afterthought of that long trudge back. That road from and back to Leith was a very long and dusty walk and it must have been and probably still is one of the most depressingly and dustiest roads in Edinburgh
When we got home from the pool we were manky and Mum questioned if we had actually been swimming. That road hasnt changed, its still minging 🤣
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25-08-2023 07:54 AM #20This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I didn’t think twice, I walked up to the edge and jumped in at the deep end, I consider myself to be a good strong swimmer. I have never experienced a shock of hitting the cold water like that ever, it came in two waves first when I hit the water and secondly when I was fully submerged it completely took my breath away, I honestly thought I’m in trouble here and struggled back to the surface and climbed out. There were a few smiling faces when I got out and I went straight back to the showers which now felt lovely and warm and left. Probably my shortest ever visit to a swimming pool.
As an aside there is an open air pool in Stonehaven which is still open to the public. I worked in Aberdeen for many years and commuted from Stonehaven but have never had the courage to try their open air pool.
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25-08-2023 07:50 PM #22
As a non swimmer at the time I was only ever in the shallow end. However I was there a lot as my dad supplied the pies for the cafe at the pool Mr Cassidy ran it and had the Chippy/restaurants the foot of Bath St. Dad also supplied the rolls and pies for the Winter Shows at Waverley. It was good wandering round when it wasn't opened behind the scenes...
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26-08-2023 05:54 AM #23
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Have seen photos of this many times on social media. What I find odd is that there was giant swimming pool near to the sea. Not just that but it was in Scotland. Seemed a bit strange given we don’t exactly get the weather for outdoor swimming pools.
Looked impressive though from what I’ve seen in photos/heard from those who lived locally.
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26-08-2023 06:14 AM #24
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The sea at that time was quite heavily polluted as Seafield sewerage works and the Eastern General hospital as well as local businesses pumped raw sewerage into the sea, that in turn gave Portobello, Leith and Edinburgh residents the opportunity to swim in freshly heated water
However heated being the operative word and I dont think there is a living person who used that pool who could ever say it was ever heated 🥶
One of the pool’s many unique selling points was the heated water, allowing the pool to be open from the month of May through to September every year until the outbreak of World War II in 1939. Construction on a site next to the coal-fired Portobello Power Station meant the pool could be maintained at a temperature of 20 degrees, however most accounts of the water temperature ranged from icy cold to sub-Siberian
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26-08-2023 06:22 AM #25
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Also this was a time when people didn’t go abroad on holiday etc. I guess when people did start doing that in the 70s that maybe contributed to the decline?
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26-08-2023 06:35 AM #26
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I remember trades fortnight or Glasgow fair weeks when Portobello would be literally jammed from Seafield to Joppa, donkey rides and deck chairs on the beach with very little room to swing a cat. The fairground was also an attraction as was the wee shop adjoining the open air pool that sold inflatables, swimming gear, buckets and spades and ice cold slush fruit drinks
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08-09-2023 04:03 PM #27This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-09-2023 04:28 PM #28This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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