The Scotsman

Step inside Edinburgh’s exclusive Victorian luxury baths

Members at Drumsheugh enjoy an array of features, including rings and trapezes suspended over the water, writes David Mclean

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Edinburgh’s luxurious Drumsheugh swimming baths have been a popular hotspot for well-heeled individual­s for well over a century.

Welcoming its first members way back in 1884, Drumsheugh Baths boasts a unique status as the Capital’s oldest private swimming club.

Occupying a prominent site on Belford Road overlookin­g the city’s picturesqu­e Dean Village, the stunning building was designed by the renowned Glasgow architect J J Burnet.

Like many other Turkish Baths and Swimming Baths of its day, the interior at Drumsheugh has a distinct Mediterran­ean flavour, with slender Moorish-style columns and arches visible throughout. Enter on a sunny day and it’s easy to imagine you’re in Cordoba.

To this day, members can enjoy the baths’ wonderful array Victorian-era features, which include rings and trapezes suspended over the water.

A gym, sauna, treatment room and lounge are among some of the other exercise and relaxation facilities available.

The 70ft main pool is covered by an exposed timber roof with a mezzanine gallery on its eastern side.

When it first opened in the 1880s, the company’s shareholde­rs included office clerks, city merchants, spinsters, advocates, doctors, stockbroke­rs and soldiers.

A similar mix of occupation­s exists at the club today. Drumsheugh Baths may enjoy a degree of exclusivit­y as a members’ only club, but that doesn’t mean it’s a closed shop.

The late Lord Mccluskey had been a long-standing member of the club and his appraisal still appears on its website.

“We welcome visitors and those who would like to join,” he wrote.

“On the annual Open Day we have many hundreds who come to see the Moorish style of architectu­re and our other Victorian delights.

“Over the year, members bring hundreds of non-members as guests, and nearly every Sunday, children welcome their friends to swimming parties.

“It is a magnificen­t social and recreation­al facility which has reciprocal membership with the excellent Western Baths Club in Glasgow. It has withstood the competitio­n from the new commercial clubs in hotels and elsewhere.

“The loyalty of the members is fierce and enduring.”

Despite its ability to endure the test of time, though, Drumsheugh Baths has been forced to face its fair share of challenges over the years.

A terrible fire broke out in February 1892, gutting the building and destroying many of its original features. The flames also spread to a nearby mission hall and hit the studios of sculptor DW Stevenson.

Both of these buildings were extensivel­y damaged.

Thankfully, though, the baths were insured and were swiftly rebuilt.

A decade later, the company running the Baths plunged into liquidatio­n and a new firm, the Drumsheugh Baths Club Limited, purchased the pool’s assets in 1902.

It would not be the last time the club experience­d financial difficulti­es. An extensive million pound refurbishm­ent plan in the early 2000s saw the club face bankruptcy as it struggled to cope with loan repayments.

A plea was sent out to the club’s 500-plus members who rallied round and saved the historic facility 0 People swimming at Drumsheugh public baths in Edinburgh, newlyrenov­ated in January 1982; and (right) the exterior and interior as it is now, above from closure. At one time there was a fixed two-year waiting list to join the exclusive club, though today this has mostly been phased out as the number of rival outlets offering similar facilities has increased.

Membership today stands at between 500-600.

This may sound like quite a lot, but, as Fraser Campbell, a member for 40 years, attests, “you are almost guaranteed to get the pool to yourself”.

It sounds like heaven, but then the annual membership fee also exceeds £1,000.

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