Saltdean Lido | |
The lido from the south
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Location: | Saltdean Park Road, Saltdean, Brighton and Hove, United Kingdom |
Coordinates: | |
Built: | 1938 |
Architect: | R.W.H. Jones |
Listed Building – Grade II* | |
Official name: Saltdean Lido | |
Designated: | 18 March 2011 |
Reference #: | 481229 |
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Saltdean Lido at Saltdean Park Road, Saltdean, in the city of Brighton and Hove, is an Art Deco Lido designed by architect R.W.H. Jones. Originally listed at Grade II by English Heritage for its architectural and historical importance,[1] its status was upgraded further to Grade II* on 18 March 2011.[2]
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The pool measures 140 by 66 feet (43 × 20 m)[3] and can accommodate 500 bathers, and is run by private leaseholder Dennis Audley. When is it well maintained, the pool is a beautiful outdoor lido that visitors come from far and wide to visit. The pool is currently the subject of a local campaign by Save Saltdean Lido, Saltdean Residents Association and Saltdean Community Association to restore the pool to its former glory.
The lido was built in 1937-38 to designs by the architect Richard Jones, and was hailed as the most innovative design of its type in Britain. With its tea terrace, sun deck, café, perched on the flat roof and distinctive curved wings at either end, it became the only lido to be featured in the Design Museum in London.[4]
In 1958, Butlins attempted to buy the derelict lido for development, the application was opposed by residents and eventually rejected by the Ministry of Housing.[5]
In 1998 the lido was reopened by Sports Minister Tony Banks. The restoration was achieved through a public and private sector partnership costing £2 million. Banks revealed he had a personal link to the Grade II listed building through his mother, who used to visit it during the Second World War. He said: "Open air sites are not able to attract National Lottery funding, so the money for this had to come through private investors having the vision to bring a piece of our heritage back into use." The reopening ceremony came two days after the lido let in its first visitors for three years.
The lido was built 1937-38 to designs by the architect Richard Jones, and was hailed as the most innovative design of its type in Britain. With its tea terrace, sun deck, cafe, perched on the flat roof and distinctive curved wings at either end, it became the only lido to be featured in the Design Museum in London.
On 18 March 2011, John Penrose, the Minister for Tourism and Heritage in the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, approved the upgrade of Saltdean Lido's listed status from Grade II to the second highest grade, Grade II*.[2] Such buildings are defined as being "particularly important ... [and] of more than special interest".[6]