Guildford Crescent Baths Explained

The Guildford Crescent Baths, originally known as the Corporation Baths, was a public swimming pool building in the centre of Cardiff, Wales. It was demolished in 1985.

Background

The swimming baths in Guildford Crescent, Cardiff, were originally opened by the Cardiff Baths Company Ltd in April 1862. They included a first class and a second class swimming pools, a Turkish bath with two hot rooms heated by dry air maintained at 110°F and 140°F,[1] a Mikveh and a gymnasium. The building was designed by T. Waring and cost £3,700 to construct. With a capacity of one million gallons of water (1abbr=offNaNabbr=off), the facilities were located next to the Bute Docks Feeder canal. The canal was culverted in 1949 and now flows under Churchill Way.[2]

Cardiff Borough Council acquired the baths in 1873. Originally open-air, work began to add a roof to the baths in 1884 and took eight years to complete. The newly roofed and refurbished facilities were officially re-opened by in 1896 by Lady Windsor.[3]

After the Empire Pool was opened in 1958, the Guildford Crescent Baths were given over exclusively for use by children.

The baths finally closed on 31 March 1984, despite a campaign to keep them open, which had gathered more than 10,000 signatures. The building was demolished in 1985[4] and, in the 2000s, an Ibis hotel was built on the site.

External links

51.4798°N -3.1706°W

Notes and References

  1. 'A visit to the Turkish baths'. Star of Gwent. (31 May 1862) p.8
  2. News: Lewis . Ffion . Cardiff's canal quarter - how it looked in the past, what's there now and the exciting future . . 12 June 2021.
  3. News: Thomas Deacon . How campaigners first fought to save Cardiff's Guildford Crescent in the 1980s . . 28 January 2019 . 26 May 2019 .
  4. News: Dan O'Neill . Memories of all the happy days at Guildford Crescent Baars . . 13 March 2007 . 26 May 2019 .