In this article, which is part of a series on the 12 stories in the Harrogate district that shaped 2023, we’re looking at the council’s £47.9 million investment into local leisure centres.
The Harrogate district has undergone something of a council leisure centre revolution in recent years – with Harrogate, Knaresborough and Ripon all boasting multi-million pound developments.
The process has certainly not been plain sailing. From sink holes and temporary gyms to delays, North Yorkshire Council’s fitness projects have rarely been out of the Stray Ferret news.
But by the end of the year it was hard to dispute the view of Mark Tweedie, the managing director of Brimhams Active, which runs leisure facilities on behalf of the council, that the district’s facilities were the envy of North Yorkshire.
In a further twist, however, the new North Yorkshire Council has now said it is to scrap Brimhams and bring all of the county’s leisure services back in-house.
Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre
The former Harrogate Hydro, now known as the Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre, opened in September following an almost 18-month transformation.
The £13.5 million refurbishment included a 400-square metre fitness centre, a new sauna and steam room, improved reception area and café, as well as an overhaul of the existing gym, spin, leisure and swimming facilities.
The Brimhams Active-run site boasts three swimming pools: a 25-metre lane pool, a diving pool and a children’s pool.

People can also attend fitness classes, including an immersive spin class, pilates and yoga.
The opening was well-received. When the Stray Ferret reported on it, one person’s comment on social media summed up how many felt:
“It’s amazing, we are so lucky to have theses facilities in Harrogate.”
In May, North Yorkshire Council said the cost of the scheme had increased from a budgeted £11.9 million.
Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness Centre
The long-awaited Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness Centre opened its doors in December.
Work began on the site, which is next to the former Knaresborough Pool, in April 2022 after plans were approved the month before.
It was originally expected to open in summer, however, the opening date was repeatedly delayed until this month.
The transformed centre now offers a six-lane 25-metre pool, a leisure pool and slide, and a 60-station fitness suite.

Like the Harrogate site, there is also a sauna and steam room, a café, a group cycling studio and a studio for fitness classes.
The outdoor children’s play area is still in the works but is expected to open in January.
North Yorkshire Council’s executive member for arts, culture and housing, Cllr Simon Myers, told the Stray Ferret ahead of its opening:
“You come over the brow of the hill in Knaresborough and see the leisure centre building – it is such an attractive building.
“It sits so well in its space, it’s full of light and the facilities are fantastic.
“This is what local authorities can achieve. It’s a real asset to Knaresborough.”
Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre, Ripon
The Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre, in Ripon, has not only faced the most bumps – or holes – in the road, but also the biggest expenditure of the three.
Although the site officially reopened in March last year, Ripon residents are yet to see the full transformation.
The old part of the site is locked in a sinkhole groundhog day of never-ending work on a “void” beneath the building, which remains closed.
Following the discovery of the void, which is believed to have been there for several years, the now defunct Harrogate Borough Council submitted a planning application to install a temporary gym in the centre’s car park in July 2022.
This was to enable the closure of the existing gym on the upper floor of the 28-year-old building, which was found to require £3.5 million worth of ground stabilisation works.
The temporary structure was supposed to open that autumn – just months after the application was submitted – however, the installation was continually delayed.
It was not until April this year that the £300,000 building, which houses the temporary gym, was installed.
The stabilisation work, which began in June, brought the cost to £18 million — £8 million over budget.
However, that too has not come without challenges.
North Yorkshire Council said in October its movement checks revealed multiple cracks up to 10mm long.
It said the cracks have affected the “weather tightness of the building and the operation of doors and windows” but added specialists had said there were no safety concerns.
The council said at the time the estimated completion date and costs were “under review”.

Works at the site.
‘Stop throwing good money after bad’
Councillor Andrew Williams, a member of the Conservative and Independents group at the council and leader of Ripon City Council, said last year it was time to stop “throwing good money after bad” and to “look for a suitable location for a new leisure centre to be built on sound land”.
In response to the discovery of the cracks, Cllr Williams said:
“The building is under very close monitoring to ensure that there is no movement as the works progress, if there is movement then the position will have to be reviewed in the light of that information.
“The situation is far from ideal and I hope that it will prove possible to complete these works because the bottom line is that Ripon needs a functioning leisure centre.”
The new building, which includes the swimming pool, sauna and steam room, has remained open throughout.
However, it looks like members will be using the temporary gym and attending group classes at Hugh Ripley Hall in the city centre well into 2024…

Read more:
- VIDEO: First look at new £17.5m Knaresborough leisure centre
- ‘Multiple cracks’ detected at Ripon leisure centre
- ‘Our leisure centres will be the envy of North Yorkshire’
Brimhams Active forecasts £330,000 loss after leisure centre delays
Brimhams Active is forecasting a £330,000 loss at the end of the year due to delays in opening new leisure centre projects in the Harrogate district.
The company, which is wholly owned by North Yorkshire Council, operates leisure facilities in the district.
Its sites include Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre, Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness Centre, the Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre in Ripon and Nidderdale Leisure and Wellness Centre in Pateley Bridge.
According to a council report, the company is forecast to record a £330,000 loss by the end of the 2023/24 financial year.
The shortfall is attributed to the delayed openings of both the Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre and Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness Centre which has “negatively affected trading projections”.

Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness Centre
The £13.5 million Harrogate scheme on Jenny Field Drive was due to open in January, but did not do so until September.
The Knaresborough facility, which is set to cost £17 million, was scheduled to open at the end of summer but is now not due to welcome customers until November.
A council report said:
“The delayed opening of two facilities, Harrogate Leisure and Wellness and Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness, has been brought about by construction delays and has negatively affected trading projections for the remainder of the year.”
However, the report added that income from the reopening may reduce losses before the end of the year.
In an interview with the Stray Ferret last month, Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, admitted the delays at the sites had been frustrating.
However, he said the benefits of the investment would soon be felt across the district.
He said:
“We will have an estate that will be the envy of North Yorkshire. The investment that’s gone in is unprecedented and significant.”
Read more:
- New photos show Knaresborough’s £17m leisure centre shaping up
- Ripon leisure centre work halted after ground movement detected
- New Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre opens
Harrogate’s famous diving club makes fresh start
Harrogate District Diving Club returned to Harrogate this week after more than three years of disruption caused by covid and the refurbishment of the Hydro.
The club has an enviable record of producing talent, including Olympic champion Jack Laugher. It also caters for people who want to dive for fun and runs DiveAbility sessions for children with additional needs.
But it has been a frustrating few years: the delayed re-opening of the Hydro meant club members had to travel to Shipley to practice, not knowing when they would be able to return to their home pool.
Numbers dwindled but the new look club returned to the newly named Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre last week.
A host of new appointments have been made, including Albany Thompson, from Leeds Diving Club, as head coach.

Albany Thompson
New chair Mandy Ward said:
“It’s a brand new start to build the club back up. It’s been a difficult period but the investment in the leisure centre means diving in Harrogate has been secured for at least another 20 years.
“Now we need to get more people aware of it and help the club grow.”

Chloe Blackburn prepares to dive.
The pool, which is run by Brimhams Active, a leisure company controlled by North Yorkshire Council, has a one-metre board, a five-metre board and two three-metre boards.
Many local divers have achieved national coaching positions around the world but Ms Ward said anyone aged six or above who can swim and isn’t afraid of deep water was welcome to join.
For more details email diveharrogate@gmail.com
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‘Our leisure centres will be the envy of North Yorkshire’
Leisure centre visitors in Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough have been as likely to wear hard hats as swimming costumes in recent years.
All three sites have undergone lengthy projects to refurbish or replace council-owned facilities.
Those in charge probably wish they too had hard hats to protect themselves from the flak caused by soaring costs and delays. The nine-month delay refurbishing the former Harrogate Hydro meant it reopened two days before the end of the school summer holidays.
But finally there is something to cheer.
The new Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre has already attracted almost 2,000 members. It has an eight-lane pool and diving boards, a well-equipped gym twice the size of its previous incarnation and three plush exercise studios.

The pool at Harrogate.

One of three studios at Harrogate.
Elsewhere, the partially-open Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre will eventually provide Ripon with a gym and pool on the same site; Knaresborough is weeks away from a new leisure centre and the gym at Pateley Bridge has been refurbished.
Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, the council-owned leisure company that runs the sites, admits the delays have been frustrating but says the benefits of the £46 million investment will soon be felt across the district. He says:
“We will have an estate that will be the envy of North Yorkshire. The investment that’s gone in is unprecedented and significant.”
Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre is certainly a cut above the average council leisure centre.
Monthly membership, which provides unlimited access to gyms, pools and classes at all Brimhams sites, is £44.95. That isn’t as cheap as Pure Gym or Coach Gyms but they haven’t got pools. Gym-only Brimhams membership is £33.
Mr Tweedie argues they also don’t have the same focus on community health as Brimhams, which he says is “reinventing conventional leisure services to a more impactful, person-centred health and wellbeing service”.
To underline this, the rather soulless ‘leisure and wellness’ moniker has been slapped across the names of all its sites.
Sinkhole saga
But although Harrogate is fully open, work continues elsewhere.
Ripon, which was the first to reopen as the Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre in March last year, appears locked in some sort of sinkhole groundhog day of never-ending work on a “void” beneath the old part of the site, which remains closed.

The Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre
Remedial work is expected to continue until spring. Mr Tweedie says the centre is “looking to reopen the first floor gym in April next year” with the ground floor studio following in summer.
In the meantime, customers will continue to use the temporary gym in the car park and attend group classes at Hugh Ripley Hall in the city centre.
Knaresborough has been less troublesome than Ripon and Harrogate, although it might not seem like it to residents who currently have nowhere in town to swim since the old pool closed a few weeks ago.

How the Knaresborough site will look.
Delays meant the seamless transition from old pool to new site didn’t quite happen, but from November people will have access to a six-lane pool, a fun pool with a slide, plus — for the first time — a studio, gym, steam room and sauna.
While others get upgrades, the beautiful Starbeck Baths feels like the forgotten ugly sister. Rumours abound the Victorian pool will be closed and Mr Tweedie’s comments don’t provide much succour:
“The council is reviewing all its leisure sites at the moment. That’s a natural process because it’s just been formed as a unitary council. It will ask for evidence on how its sites perform and the opportunities for development.”

Starbeck Baths
The audit will be followed by a strategy. Does he think Starbeck Baths will still exist in 10 years?
“That’s a decision for councillors. But what I can say is there has been no feedback to me about planning to close Starbeck.”
Membership figures
Brimhams, which employs the full-time equivalent of about 160 staff and has a turnover of £8.4 million, was set up by Harrogate Borough Council in August 2021. But it has been run by the new North Yorkshire Council since April.
Mr Tweedie says Brimhams “was set up to be commercially effective but also to deliver better health outcomes for the community”.
The council currently provides a £1.7 million annual subsidy, which is due to reduce to £1.2 million when the new centres are complete.
The early commercial signs at Harrogate are encouraging. Membership was 600 when the Hydro closed. The new site has 1,800 members — above the 1,750 target for the end of the month.
Ripon, which has less gym competition than Harrogate, has 1,200 members and Nidderdale has 700.
When we last interviewed Mr Tweedie staff shortages was a huge issue but he says this has eased.

Mark Tweedie outside the Harrogate site.
Brimhams is the only council-owned trading company in North Yorkshire. A private company called Everyone Active provides services in Ryedale and Scarborough; Richmond Leisure Trust runs facilities in Richmond and a charity called Inspiring Healthy Lifestyles oversees sites in Selby. The former district councils in Craven and Hambleton ran leisure sites.
Brimhams is due to take control of Selby’s services, which includes Selby Leisure Centre and Tadcaster Leisure Centre, in September next year.
That decision appeared to be a vote of confidence in the Brimhams model but uncertainty remains about how leisure services will be managed long-term in the county once North Yorkshire Council has completed its review.
But in the short-term, it’s all about growing membership — and getting Knaresborough and Ripon sorted.
Read more:
- Ripon leisure centre halts price increase due to ongoing work
- Harrogate Hydro delay will see no change in £13.5m project budget, says council
New Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre opens
The newly refurbished Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre opened its doors today after a £13.5 million project.
The facility, which was previously called the Harrogate Hydro, had been closed since April last year as part of a renovation scheme.
Now, the centre off Jennyfield Drive is open under a new name.
The refurbishment included a 400 square metre fitness centre, a new sauna and steam suite, improved reception and café, as well an overhaul of the existing gym, spin, leisure and swimming facilities.
Local man Alan Harwood was among those visiting the newly opened leisure centre this morning.
He told the Stray Ferret he had never been to the facility before, but took up one of the swimming membership offers advertised by Brimhams Active, which operates the site on behalf of North Yorkshire Council, as part of the opening.
Mr Harwood said:
“It looks good. I had never been to the Hydro before but wanted to try it out for swimming.”



The centre is open for swimming from 6.30am until 9pm Monday to Thursday, 6.30am until 8pm on a Friday and 6.30am until 7pm on a weekend.
Meanwhile, the gym will be open from 6.15am until 9.30pm Monday to Thursday, 6.15am until 7.30pm on a Friday and 6.15am until 6.30pm on Saturday and Sunday.
Prices include £5.45 for an adult swim, but there are also membership schemes available at £33.95 a month.
The centre also offers all inclusive memberships, which includes access to the gym, for £44.95 a month or £35.95 for concessions.
Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, said:
Petition submitted to push council to honour Harrogate’s Lioness“There will be an increase to membership fees, but we are committed to keeping fees as low as possible and we have additional discounts for students, people who are unemployed, disabled or aged over 65.
“The increase delivers an all-inclusive membership fee with access to unlimited swim, gym and group exercise at all Brimhams facilities that remains lower than our 2021 prices, as we temporarily reduced prices upon reopening after covid.”
A petition to honour England footballer Rachel Daly in Harrogate has been submitted to North Yorkshire Council after attracting more than 700 signatures.
There are now hopes it will be debated by the Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee, and local councillors can push officers for action.
The petition forms part of a campaign by Killinghall Nomads, backed by the Stray Ferret, to ensure the Lioness was recognised after playing in the World Cup Final.
As well as being available online, paper copies were signed by attendees at the club’s World Cup watch party last weekend.
Her former football club has called for Harrogate’s Hydro leisure centre to be named after her.
Following a 16-month refurbishment, it is set to open next week under its new name, Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre.
North Yorkshire Council has said it is “urgently” looking at creating a policy for recognising successful local people.
Ripon’s new leisure centre has already been named after the city’s Olympic gold medal winner, diver Jack Laugher.
Read more:
- Rossett sports pitches to be renamed in honour of Rachel Daly
- Petition launched calling for Harrogate to honour Rachel Daly
Killinghall Nomads, which has honoured Daly by naming its cafe after her, said it is important that there is a public recognition.
That sentiment has been echoed by her former school.
While Rossett School will name its sports centre’s 3G pitches after her, both the headteacher, Tim Milburn, and her former coach, Mike Sweetman, said a civic honour was needed.
Mr Sweetman added:
“Killinghall Nomads have done their bit and we are doing our bit. I still feel the council needs to do something for her.”
Daly was a crucial member of the England squad, playing in all of the group stage matches, as well as the last 16, quarter final and semi-final matches.
She played the first half of the final against Spain, before being substituted at half time. The Lionesses went on to lose 1-0, finishing as runners up in the tournament.
Young Rachel Daly fans from Killinghall Nomads watch the World Cup Final
The first pictures from inside the refurbished Harrogate Hydro have been revealed.
The facility has been closed since April last year as part of a £13.5 million refurbishment project.
It will reopen in two weeks time under the new name Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre.
Pictures posted on social media by Natalie McGuire, director of business development at Brimhams Active, which runs the facility on behalf of North Yorkshire Council, show how the centre will look.
The refurbishment includes a 400 square metre fitness centre, a new sauna and steam suite, improved reception and café, as well an overhaul of the existing gym, spin, leisure and swimming facilities.


The new diving area.
The leisure centre in Jennyfields closed for what was supposed to be a nine-month refurbishment costing £11.9 million.
But January’s scheduled re-opening did not happen. In May, North Yorkshire Council said the cost of the scheme had risen to £13.5 million and customers would be welcomed back in August.
The centre is now set to open on September 4.
Read more:
- Harrogate Hydro delay will see no change in £13.5m project budget, says council
- Cost of delayed Harrogate Hydro refurbishment increases by £1m
Call for urgent review of new bins after dog poo bags litter Jennyfields
A councillor has called for an urgent review of litter bins in the Jennyfields area of Harrogate after reports of dog poo bags piling up.
North Yorkshire Council has removed three bins close to Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre — formerly the Hydro — and replaced them with two larger bins.
The old bins were situated in areas used by walkers and dog owners but the new ones are alongside main roads.
This makes them easier to empty but less convenient for people using the fields around the leisure centre to use.
Consequently litter and dog waste bags are being left to pile up.
Councillor Michael Harrison, a Conservative who represents the area on North Yorkshire Council, said the new bins were designed for dog waste and general waste and are emptied by household waste collection crews rather than requiring a separate collection.
He added:
“These have been successfully rolled out in the other villages I represent after some initial teething problems.
“I am however aware of the specific concerns raised in Jennyfields and have asked for an urgent review of the number and siting of the bins.”

Dog owners are discarding dog waste where the bins used to be on the fields rather than carry it to Ripon Road.
Jennyfields residents have contacted the Stray Ferret with their concerns since the new bins arrived last week.
Elizabeth Horner said:
“I live near the Hydro fields and the amount of rubbish from having no bins in area has got disgusting.
“Sadly I’ve counted 15 bottles on the field today.”
Dog walker Diana Salama added:
“I have spoken to seven other dog walkers who regularly walk their dogs at the Hydro. All were puzzled and confused as there is nowhere to easily dispose of poo.
“One lady commented that to go up to the main road meant a long detour and putting the dog on a lead and she would not do this.
“Two were confused and had ended up taking poo home but had no intention of doing this ongoing. Two had left poo bags where the bin used to be.”
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She added:
“No one felt the new concept was effective for dog walkers even though it’s clearly better for the council.”
Ms Salama said there was particular anger at the removal of the bin next to the basketball court.

The field near the basketball court.
The Stray Ferret spoke to several dog walkers in the area this morning who agreed. They said the amount of litter and dog waste in this area, where young people congregate, was worrying.
We asked North Yorkshire Council why the change had been made and whether any consultation had been carried out.
However, a spokesperson said the officer responsible was currently on leave and therefore it could not comment.
New bins being rolled out across Harrogate district
The new bin policy is being rolled out across the Harrogate district. About 250 small bins are being replaced by larger ones.
Dog walkers in nearby Knox expressed concerns in June when the change was implemented there.

Maxie Schiffman-Rowinski has complained to the council about the new dog waste bin in front of her house in Knox.
Paul Haslam, a Conservative who represents Bilton and Nidd Gorge on the council, said the situation would be reviewed at the end of next month.
Cllr Haslam said the new approach freed up time for the street cleansing team to do other jobs, such as sweep streets.
He added it was also more environmentally friendly because the larger bins contained wheelie bins that could be emptied by machines whereas the smaller old bins contained plastic bags that had to be replaced regularly.
