Surbiton Lagoon

Map showing the location of Surbiton Lagoon within Greater London

Surbiton Lagoon is a defunct and demolished open air swimming pool that was located in Tolworth, in London, United Kingdom.

It opened in May 1934 though had been open for business since April, and was situated in Raeburn Avenue in what was then the Surbiton Urban District of Surrey. It was situated on the 418 bus route of London Country Buses,[1] and near to Berrylands railway station and Tolworth railway station.

The lagoon complex was designed by the architect HT Mather. The pool had a maximum depth of 9 feet (2.7 m) and a minimum depth of 3 feet (0.91 m). It was 165 ft (50 m) x 90 ft (27 m) - a huge pool by any standards. The lagoon was closed permanently in 1980.

Opening day

The opening ceremony was performed on a Wednesday evening in May 1934 by Mr. H.S. Durbin JP and featured many displays of swimming, including an appearance by Miss Ivy Hawke,[2] the successful 1928 channel swimmer. A water polo match was held, and the festivities went on into the evening.[3]

The Lagoon

The Lagoon was approached along a grass lined entrance drive, much like the housing estate in the picture of the site today. On the left was a small stream, a tributary to the Hogsmill, and in front the whitewashed entrance with fittings picked out in bright blue paint.

As visitors entered the pool complex through a turnstile they were greeted by an ornamental fountain.

The pool had a full set of diving boards, both springboards and diving platforms at the deep end, and a simple tall slide. At the shallow end was a smaller slide suitable for children. Entry to the water was down a set of submerged stairs, an unusual design feature.[4]

Along the right hand side of the pool was a set of sun terraces, concrete broad stairs with wooden boards on top. There was a lagoon café, and an ice cream booth. Separate ladies' and gentlemen's changing facilities, each with a children's section. Ladies' facilities were on the left and gentlemen's were straight ahead, past the deep end.

The pool was surrounded by a paved area, with the paving at the edge of the pool somewhat rough, making climbing out of the water without using the stairs an exfoliating experience. Though the water was heated, it was always a bracing experience to get in.

The lagoon had a holiday camp carefree atmosphere:

"Surbiton Lagoon was an awesome place the be in the summer in the 70's. The moment you got through the turnstiles and saw that big fountain you could feel the excitement. It had huge terraces where you could sunbathe all day, the pool was massive with a really deep, deep end, the girls looked great in their bikinis. Baywatch in Berrylands. I know lets knock it down and build another really boring housing development on it. Yeah, that's much better. Not! Massive, massive shame it was closed down. A shame on Kingston council. I feel it is sorely missed!"
JTait New Malden[5]

The tennis courts are now covered by a housing estate, the lagoon itself has been landscaped. The site was 20 acres, and the development cost was £18,000 in 1934.

References

  1. London Country Buses were dark green liveried, and more formally termed "London General Country Services" buses serving districts well outside London
  2. List of Cross Channel Swimmers, by date
  3. Surbiton - The Lagoon
  4. Archive pictures showing entry steps, sun terrace and fountain
  5. Question and response re Surbiton lagoon

External links

Coordinates: 51°23′28″N 0°16′46″W / 51.39100°N 0.27950°W / 51.39100; -0.27950

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/17/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.