Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Ex-council leader had fears over ‘cramped’ site of new Olympia

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THE leader of Dundee City Council at the time the Olympia was built has revealed he has always had concerns about the site of the crisis-hit centre.

Ken Guild, who headed up the SNP administra­tion, claims he was worried the East Whale Lane plot for the £33 million swimming centre was “cramped”.

But the retired councillor says the local authority felt pressured to make sure the new Olympia – replacing the old one at the waterfront – remained in the city centre, rather than a more spacious site on the outskirts.

He also says there were no other options available.

His comments come after it was revealed this week the pools are likely to be shut for a total of two years – until October 2023 – after several major issues were discovered, some of which are believed to date back to its constructi­on.

It has led to calls from locals for the existing building to be knocked down and a new one built elsewhere – with one swimming group saying “compromise­s” were made in the design.

Mr Guild said: “It had been suggested we would put the new centre near Camperdown Park off Kingsway West but public opinion was almost 100% against that.

“The pressure was on, not just my administra­tion but the one before it, to get one near the waterfront.

“The site that was chosen was just big enough.

“It was known it would be a challenge to put a building on that site but it was decided it was sufficient.”

The pools complex was built on the site of a former car park.

Mr Guild added: “That location would not have been my first choice.”

Councillor­s will meet next Wednesday to discuss and approve repairs costing £6.1m.

The Olympia was built by Balfour Beatty, under the Mansell Constructi­on Services branding.

The public have called for clarity from the council over who is to blame for the existing issues.

A review is set to assess any liability of contractor­s, but documents released so far suggest there have been issues linked to both the constructi­on and maintenanc­e of the building.

Balfour Beatty has so far declined to comment despite repeated approaches from the Tele about its role in the project.

When asked why he believed there are now such major problems with the building, which only opened nine years ago, Mr Guild said: “I honestly don’t know. I only know what has been in the press since it closed.

“In general terms, it was a fairly cramped site.

“I’m short on detail and I don’t want to start speculatin­g, but what I do know is that the public wanted it in the centre, and not out at the Kingsway in what would have been a relatively remote location.”

David Dorward, who was council chief executive at the time Olympia was built, and Stewart Murdoch, director of operator Leisure and Culture Dundee in 2013, both declined to comment.

 ?? ?? Ken Guild had concerns about the size of the site.
Ken Guild had concerns about the size of the site.

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