
Gillingham lido open for summer after £250k refurb
The only riverside saltwater tidal swimming pool in England is reopening with a new £250,000 children's "splash pad" water play area.The Strand Lido and Leisure Park, in Gillingham, Kent, will welcome families back for the summer on Saturday.Now recognised as "historically significant" by Historic Pools of Britain, the leisure complex includes an outdoor leisure pool, six 25m lanes for swimming, a 300m lazy river, a café and play areas.But the most excitement will be around the new £248,283 children's water feature, which uses 30 sensor-activated waterjets in a beach-themed play area.
Councillor Nina Gurung, the council's portfolio holder for heritage, culture and leisure, previously said: "We are proud to have invested in this exciting project to improve the already great offering and add a brand new fun feature for our children and families to enjoy both this summer and for years to come."The Strand opened in 1896 and the refurbishment was funded by money given to Medway Council by housing developers, the Local Democracy Reporting Service reports.The refurbishment was done using £248,283 of section 106 money, which is made up of contributions from housing developers to Medway Council.The leisure complex is now open each weekend until the end of summer and every day during the school summer holidays.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
Temporary Newark traveller site extended in flood risk area
Temporary permission for a traveller site in a town in Nottinghamshire has been extended despite fears of flood risks in the View Caravan Park, in Tolney Lane in Newark, has been approved to continue to operate as a traveller site until June 2026 by Newark and Sherwood District to make the 1.5-acre site - equivalent to the size of a football pitch - which is being used by up to 15 caravans, permanent was submitted in Environment Agency and Newark Town Council objected to the proposal as the site is on a flood plain, but residents had said they felt safe. 'Non-mitigated disaster' The council's planning committee discussed the application on Thursday and recommended extending the site's temporary status instead of granting it permanent approval, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS).Councillor Linda Dales backed the move, highlighting the shortage of traveller sites in the area at the meeting."I hope that in a year's time that we have a Tolney Lane flood alleviation scheme under way," she said."We don't have sufficient pitches [for travellers] available."However, councillor Keith Melton questioned the decision, saying: "It leaves me with an impression that allowing the application for just a year is a way of trying not to get the blame if something goes wrong."It makes me feel uncomfortable. I would rather see it as a permanent solution with support from the Environment Agency."Councillor Adrian Amer urged more government funding to help flood risks in Newark, saying it was a "disaster waiting to happen", adding addressing flood risks along Tolney Lane was just "one part of the jigsaw puzzle"."Why are we allowing to let a community feel settled and happy living [in this area], where if we have major floods? It will be a complete non-mitigated disaster," he added.


Telegraph
4 hours ago
- Telegraph
How entry fees took over Britain's countryside
Growing stretches of the English countryside are 'falling behind a paywall,' campaigners warn as national parks grapple with drastic funding cuts. The Peak District National Park Authority caused uproar last week when executives said they were mulling the introduction of a £1 entry fee. Meanwhile, visitors to the New Forest face fresh parking charges. Elsewhere, centuries-old free access to Lord Bathurst's Cirencester Park in Gloucestershire was monetised last year, access to a popular waterfall on Dorset's Bridehead Estate was blocked as of Monday, and the National Trust has hiked its membership fees by 25pc in the space of just three years. While the fees may be small, campaigners say they underpin a crisis of growing inaccessibility to Britain's beauty spots. Recent government research found that 34pc of people do not have access to a woodland larger than 50 acres within 4km of their home. And just 8pc of land in England is covered by the right to roam – making it one of the worst rate rates in Europe, according to a separate 2022 study. Lewis Winks, of the Right to Roam campaign, said: 'From entry fees for historically open parks, to pay-for-permission wild camping and river swimming, the paywalling of the countryside is quietly shutting the public out. 'Britain already has the lowest levels of nature connectedness in Europe – we should be making it easier for everyone to get outside, not creating more barriers.' National park entry fees An entry fee to England's most accessible national park, the Peak District, has been suggested by its chief executive Phil Mulligan. The authority's financial troubles have been blamed on a fixed government grant that has not accounted for inflation or other costs such as the rise in the minimum wage. The dwindling of funds comes as the Peak District grapples with parking mayhem, overcrowding and litter problems which have blighted popular attractions such as Mam Tor. Mr Mulligan told the BBC that the park, which has around 13 million visitors per year, has cut 10pc of its staff in recent months and suffered a 50pc real terms funding cut over the last decade. A 10p per person fee would cover its recent losses, while a bolder £1 rate would eliminate the need for core government funding. The idea has been backed by the Reform UK leader of Derbyshire County Council. But the Peak District isn't alone in considering an admission charge. Kevin Bishop, chief executive of the Dartmoor National Park Authority, questioned if the rugged moorlands need to become the 'equivalent to a low-emission zone' where 'you get charged entry'. As reported by The Times, he said a public debate was needed on how national parks' upkeep should be paid for. 'Are you going to have a national park funding model whereby you have to pay a hiking licence, like you have to do in some countries every time you want to go for a walk?' The prospect of enforcing entry fees to access our national parks – which would need to be greenlit by the Government – has split opinion. Diane Drinkwater, of the British Beekeepers Association, believes access to nature 'should never become a luxury', and stresses that revenue raised must be ring-fenced and reinvested into the natural world. Kate Ashbrook, of the Open Spaces Society, said the group 'would certainly object to a fee just to enter an area', while regular Peak District hiker, Chloe Groom, said: 'The people who will be hit hardest are those that visit the national park two or three times a week. This takes enjoying the outdoors from a free and accessible activity to one that has a price tag.' Reacting after news broke of the potential £1 charge, Telegraph reader, Lee McLoughlin, commented: 'Here begins the monetising of outdoor spaces. Hell awaits society.' Mike Ross, who labelled the proposal 'ridiculous', said 'soon we won't be able to visit any part of the country without paying fees. What is life coming to?'. A Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs spokesman said: 'Our national parks are a source of great national pride, which is why this government is providing them with a capital uplift of £15m. 'This is in addition to the £400m we are investing in restoring nature across the country. We are also helping national parks cut through bureaucracy and take an entrepreneurial approach to boost earnings.' Car park fees continue to climb Cash-strapped authorities have also been accused of exploiting Britain's beauty spots via their car parking fees. A minimum stay at Snowdon's popular Pen-y-Pass car park costs £20. Staying for a full day sets visitors back £40. Examples of rate increases at beauty spots are endless. Despite strong opposition, Leeds City Council this year introduced parking charges at five of its parklands, while Labour-run Birmingham City Council is pushing to bring in controversial rates at a trio of parks visited by thousands each year. The year-round fees, costing up to £5 a day, are proposed for Sutton Park, Sheldon Country Park and Lickey Hills Country Park. Ewan Mackey, a Conservative councillor, said: 'These parks were given to the people of this city for their use in perpetuity, for the benefit of their health and well-being. 'They weren't given to the council to be used as an out in Labour's ongoing cycle of crises.' The council concedes the charges are 'unpopular', but said in a report that it is 'reasonable to ask park users to contribute financially to [their] upkeep'. Elsewhere, Forestry England is considering introducing fees at its 130 car parks in the New Forest. Branded 'highly immoral' and a 'penny pinching' tactic by critics, the public body is understood to be eyeing up the parking price plan for next year. It partly blamed the need to charge motorists on 'prolonged bad weather' which has damaged its car parks and increased maintenance bills. A spokesman said: 'Caring for the New Forest has become increasingly expensive in recent years. This includes the price of vital materials needed to repair and maintain the car parks that have increased by more than 50pc over the last three years. 'At the same time, higher levels of damage to trails and car parks have been caused by prolonged bad weather and increasing usage.' Forestry England said less than 20pc of its funding comes from the Government. The spokesman added: 'We need to raise the majority of funds for car parks, trails and all of the work we do, ourselves. A sustainable approach to funding is needed if we are going to be able to continue to do this vital work and provide these facilities.' For those regularly using beauty spot car parks, annual membership with charities and organisations such as the National Trust, RSPB and Forestry Commission continues to be the most cost-effective option. Locations such as the White Cliffs of Dover (£6 per car) charge for parking, but the sites are free to use for members. Those looking to save on National Trust annual membership can purchase a National Trust for Scotland annual pass for £74.40, and still benefit from the parking perks in the rest of the UK. This is £22 cheaper than buying traditional National Trust membership.


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
It's Bath time! Roman ruins, ginormous bunns and a Jane Austen tour: How to spend a day in the historical city
7.15am We arrive at Paddington early to get the 7.29am Great Western train to Bath Spa. On board, we eat miniature pots of porridge and zip past Reading, Swindon and Wiltshire until, at 8.43am, we hit Bath. The weather is, this morning at least, grey and windy. Still, Bath is the country's only city to be designated a Unesco World Heritage Site in its entirety and, even in the drizzle, it's obvious why. There are 5,000 listed buildings in this 112,000- person city. We leave the station and begin ogling the cobbled streets and limestone houses. 9am Time to head to the Roman Baths for a guided tour of one of Europe's largest and best-preserved Roman ruins. The baths were built around 70AD on top of a geothermal spring that, thanks to some canny ancient plumbing, gave citizens a constant supply of 46C bathing water. Men and women would come here to wash, socialise and seek revenge on their enemies – as shown by the 'curse tablets' on display at the Baths' museum. Apparently, disgruntled Romans would inscribe curses on to metal sheets, then toss them into the bathing pools where they believed the goddess Minerva lived. Yikes. 10.15am We head to Sally Lunn's – a 'bunn' restaurant inside one of Bath's oldest buildings (the site dates back to approximately 1480). If you're a bunn ignoramus, some context: in 1680 a young Huguenot called Solange Luyon fled France and came to Bath. She rebranded herself as Sally Lunn, got a job in a bakery and began selling her own special 'bunns' to locals. A Sally Lunn's bunn is a bit like a brioche roll, only bigger and more savoury. We order a stack of breakfast bunns, sliced in half, toasted and topped with bacon, smoked salmon and avocado. Somewhat underestimating their size, we also get a few sweet bunns to share. The group consensus is that the £6.50 cinnamon-butter one is the best. 11.20am Buoyed by our bunns and the improving weather, we meet the Jane Austen tour guide Theresa Roche (below, in lilac costume) for an Austen-themed march around Bath. Theresa, who is part of the Strictly Jane Austen Tours company, wears a traditional Regency dress and takes us to various Austen-related places: the market Jane might have shopped in, the flat on Gay Street where she moved after her father died. When asked – and after careful consideration – Theresa says that her favourite Austen man is either Henry Tilney from Northanger Abbey or Captain Wentworth from Persuasion. Excellent choices. 1.20pm The sun is properly out now, so we buy supplies from The Beckford Bottle Shop and sit in the Royal Crescent as YOU's drinks columnist Charlotte conducts an impromptu wine tasting. (Highlights include a rosé fizz from Sussex and a Chablis-like Assyrtiko from Crete.) Built between 1767 and 1775, the Royal Crescent was designed by John Wood the younger, and contains 30 identical Georgian terraced houses. Or, rather, almost identical. In 1972, one resident – Miss Wellesley-Colley – painted her front door primrose yellow, rather than the street-established white. She was consequently given two enforcement orders from Bath City Council and forced to undergo a public inquiry. Impressively, Wellesley-Colley won; the door remains yellow today. 3pm We drive 15 minutes to Homewood, an 18th-century country house that became a hotel in 2018. Alongside 31 bedrooms, it has an excellent spa. So, in appropriately Roman fashion, we spend the afternoon bathing. The kit here is bougier than the spas of 70AD; there's an indoor hydrotherapy pool, sauna, outdoor pool and a bucket you stand under that douses you with freezing water. An hour or so later it's time for Homewood's afternoon tea, then back to the station for the 18.13 train home. On board, we google Royal Crescent property prices (around £4.5m for a house, sadly) and dream of cinnamon bunns. Bliss.