Significant progress is being made to restore and expand Templemore Baths in Belfast.
The project will see many of the building's original heritage features sympathetically restored. Work to-date has seen the brickwork on the Baths’ iconic chimney and caretaker’s cottage repointed, a new roof placed over a courtyard area where a new café will be located, drainage upgrades throughout the building and substantial timber repair works.
Over the next year, other key features will be restored including the laundry room, swimming pool and slipper baths. Extensive interpretive space will also be developed to tell the story of the Baths' history and its importance to the local community. A new extension which is also underway will provide an additional six lane 25 metre pool, spa facilities and a fitness suite.
Belfast Lord Mayor, Councillor Kate Nicholl, said: "Templemore is an iconic building where thousands of children over many decades learned to swim, so it holds a special place in people's hearts. As the sole surviving Victorian public baths on the island of Ireland, it is also one of Belfast’s most historically significant buildings, so I am delighted to see so much care and attention being put into its restoration.
"This is one of seven new and upgraded leisure facilities that make up Belfast City Council’s £105 million Leisure Transformation Programme - the biggest investment of its kind in the UK. This investment demonstrates the importance that Council puts on the health and wellbeing of our citizens. The opening of the new Avoniel this autumn followed by the completion of Templemore in autumn 2022 will be a huge boost to the area."
Belfast City Council is investing £12 million in the project, with the remaining £5 million coming from The National Lottery Heritage Fund.
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