Harrogate District Diving Club has said the looming nine-month closure of Harrogate Hydro will be worth the short-term disruption.
The club, which has more than 50 members and helped produce Olympic champion Jack Laugher, faces the prospect of not being able to return to its home pool until next year. The Hydro is due to close for major refurbishment on April 8.
Some divers will train at other venues, including Shipley diving pool. Others will stop training altogether until the Hydro reopens. Since the announcement of the Hydro’s closure two divers have left the club.
Divers can also use Jennyfield Styan Community Centre for dry land sessions using a full size diving board. These sessions allow divers to dive off the board onto a crash mat.

Harrogate Hydro, Jennyfield Drive.
The diving boards have not been in use since November 2020 due to structural problems.
The renovation work will include new diving facilities at the same heights as before. Club chair Leanne Jalland said:
“We welcome the closure and renovations, whilst it is not ideal to be away from the pool in the short-term. The current diving facilities were at the end of their life and needed to be replaced.
“A little short-term disruption without a pool while the new diving facilities are being rebuilt is worth it because the new facilities secure the future of diving in Harrogate for a few more decades.”
Ms Jalland added the club had been preparing for a loss in funds due to the work and had secured funding from Sport England to fund hiring space at other diving venues.
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She said:
“We are passionate about introducing more children in our community to diving and while the Hydro is closed that will not stop. Considering that during the start of the pandemic we only had a dozen divers left, we’ve managed to grow the club considerably during a difficult time period with limited facilities and resources.
“So imagine what we can do with our new facility. We can’t wait for next year, the future is looking bright for our club.”
The £11.8 million refurbishment will give the Hydro a new two-storey extension, entrance, cafe and reception area.
There will also be a new fitness suite and the changing areas will be upgraded.
Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, which Harrogate Borough Council set up last year to run its leisure facilities, said the plan was to reopen the pool first in nine months time.
Harrogate Hydro set to close for nine monthsThe Hydro in Harrogate will close for nine months on April 8 to undergo an £11.8m refurbishment.
The leisure centre and pool is to get a two-storey extension as well as a new entrance, cafe and reception area.
There will also be new diving board equipment, a new fitness suite and the changing areas will be upgraded.
Members will be offered reduced rates to use other council-run leisure facilities in the district, as well as the opportunity to participate in group exercise sessions at the nearby Jennyfield Styan Community Centre.
The current £38.95 monthly charge will go down to £32.

A computer generated image of how the Hydro will look.
Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, which Harrogate Borough Council set up last year to run its leisure facilities, said the plan was to reopen the pool first in nine months time.
The other facilities, including the new fitness suite, are expected to be ready three months later.
Extend opening hours
Mr Tweedie said the refurbishment would give Brimhams Active the opportunity to redeploy staff at its other sites, which could enable some to extend their opening hours.
However, it will leave Harrogate without a council-run swimming pool for the rest of the year.
Brimhams also operates the Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre in Ripon, Knaresborough Pool, Starbeck Baths and Nidderdale Pool and Leisure Centre in Pateley Bridge.
It also operates the Turkish Baths in Harrogate, Fairfax Wellbeing and Community Hub in Harrogate, Jennyfield Styan Community Centre and Little Explorers Day Nursery at Harrogate Hydro.
Look for a full interview with Mark Tweedie about leisure services in the Harrogate district on the Stray Ferret this weekend.
Green light for major refurbishment of Harrogate HydroHarrogate Borough Council has given the green light for a major refurbishment of Harrogate’s Hydro swimming pool.
Councillors on the planning committee approved the plans today with work on the project set to start in April.
The Hydro was first opened in 1999 and replaced the old Coppice Valley pool.
As part of its plans to overhaul leisure services, which were approved in June 2020, the council outlined a £13.5 million project to refurbish The Hydro.
The authority will demolish the current ‘drum’ entrance and replace it with a larger structure that includes a bigger café and reception area on the ground floor and a new 400 square metres fitness suite on the first floor.
Outside, the car park will be reconfigured with a new area bicycle storage and room for six electric vehicle charging points.
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Cllr Stanley Lumley, Harrogate Borough Council’s cabinet member for culture, tourism and sport, and chair of the board of directors at Brimhams Active, said:
“I’m delighted that the planning committee has approved the plans to redevelop the Hydro in Harrogate.
“This multi-million pound refurbishment project will create exciting new opportunities for local people to move more, live well and feel great.
“Our vision is to create a healthier and more active population that are living longer, more independent and happier lives.
“By creating first-class facilities like this we’ll be able to deliver the aims and objectives of Brimhams Active.”
Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, said:
“Through the provision of fantastic modern leisure and wellness facilities and engaging, inclusive services we will be able to help many more people become active and lead healthier lifestyles.”
Further projects at The Hydro
The move to refurbish The Hydro comes as other work is being done to upgrade the building.
In July, the council confirmed it is to buy a new diving platform to replace the damaged one that has kept divers out of the pool for eight months.
Meanwhile, the council has also given approval for 420 solar panels to be installed on the roof of the pool as part of a decarbonisation project.
The council successfully bid this year for funding from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy‘s public sector decarbonisation scheme, which helped to fund the panels.
A total of £1.8 million will be spent at The Hydro to install the solar panels, as well as replace gas boilers with air source heat pumps and put in place new energy monitoring and control systems.
The Hydro is now run by Brimhams Active, a new arm’s length leisure company set up by the council this year. It has taken over the running of 12 leisure facilities in Harrogate, Knaresborough, Ripon and Pateley Bridge.
Harrogate council set to build new diving platform at HydroHarrogate Borough Council is to buy a new diving platform at the Hydro in Harrogate to replace the damaged one that has kept divers out of the pool for eight months.
Harrogate District Diving Club, which has developed many elite divers including Ripon Olympic champion Jack Laugher, is based at the Hydro.
Its members have had to travel to West Yorkshire since cracks in the concrete platforms at the Hydro were discovered in November.
The situation finally looks like being resolved after the council issued a statement today saying a report had revealed the current platform should be replaced due to its age and the amount of work required to fix it.
The Stray Ferret asked the council how much it expected to spend on the replacement. A council spokesperson said it would not know until the tender for the work was agreed.
The council will now prepare a new report seeking approval to go out to tender and appoint a contractor to carry out the works.
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It is not known when diving will be permitted at the Hydro again. However, the council said it will announce timescales once a contractor has been appointed.
The activity pool, main pool and teaching pool may have to close during the work.
Trevor Watson, director of economy, environment and housing at the council, said:
“Diving is a sport which relies solely on high-quality facilities, and unlike other water sports, it cannot take part in any pool – it needs the necessary diving platform and deep water.
“With the future investment of a new diving platform we will be able to provide the necessary infrastructure to help nurture talent and create a pathway for future Olympians.”
Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, the company being set up by the council to run leisure services, said:
Frustration grows over diving board closures at Harrogate’s Hydro“By investing in diving facilities we can ensure the legacy of an exciting and successful sport for Harrogate, the region and even the country.”
The parent of a diver who uses The Hydro has expressed frustration that two diving boards have been out of action for over six months, forcing members of a local club to travel to West Yorkshire to train.
Olympic divers such as Jack Laugher trained at the Harrogate Borough Council-owned pool but aspiring athletes have been unable to use the boards since November last year.
The pool, which caters for high board and springboard divers, reopened on April 12 but diving remains affected after the council found cracks in the concrete that supports the boards during a routine inspection.
Neil Blackburn told the Stray Ferret that his 11-year-old daughter is part of the Dive Harrogate club that trained twice a week at the pool pre-covid restrictions.
He said divers have been forced to train in Shipley, near Bradford, and believes there is “little appetite” to get the Hydro diving boards fixed. He estimates the cost of repairs could be a quarter of a million pounds.
Mr Blackburn said:
“The club are really good at keeping us informed and they have full backing of Swim England, but it does appear there is little appetite to get the concrete towers repaired from either the Hydro or the council any time soon.
“As always this appears to be about funding and it’s starting to become a worry that they may not bother at all. The estimate for the repair is £250k. For a club which has produced divers who are currently in Tokyo for the Olympics this seems a real shame.”
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A council spokesman said:
Harrogate council awarded £2.4m to cut carbon emissions“Unfortunately, during a routine inspection of the diving board platform at The Hydro in Harrogate, cracks in the concrete were discovered.
“A further independent survey was carried out to establish the stability, integrity and durability of the diving structure.
“Results show that the diving platform should not be used until work has been carried out.
“We are exploring possible options and will have an update in due course.”
The government has awarded Harrogate Borough Council over £2.4m to cut carbon emissions at the Hydro swimming pool and Harrogate Convention Centre.
The Hydro, which opened in 1999, received £1.8m to replace gas boilers with air source heat pumps, install solar panels on the roof and put in place new energy monitoring and control systems.
A total of £580,000 will be spent on the almost 40-year-old convention centre to convert its lighting to LEDs, install solar panels and heat pumps and introduce variable speed drives to control the fans and pipework insulation.
Air source heat pumps are regarded as an environmentally friendly way to heat buildings. They work by absorbing heat from outside air and pumping it indoors.
The council, which has a goal of being a net-zero carbon economy by 2038, hopes the improvements will cut emissions by 577 tonnes a year at the Hydro and 70 tonnes at the convention centre.
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Kathryn Daly, head of place-shaping and economic growth at the council, said:
“We have ambitious plans to ensure our own operations and buildings will be clean, efficient and have a net zero carbon economy by 2038.
“This government funding provides a significant step to allow us to achieve this.”
The council has awarded a £1.1m contract to Arcadis to design the first phase of a proposed £47 million redevelopment of Harrogate Convention Centre.
Asked how the redevelopment might affect the new funding, a council spokesman said:
“Arcadis are still working on design plans for the proposed development.
“Should the redevelopment be agreed, and subsequent planning applications submitted and approved, these improvements will no doubt complement the plans.”
The council successfully bid for the funding from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy‘s public sector decarbonisation scheme.
The scheme has so far awarded £932 million to 429 projects in England and Wales.
Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust announced in January that it had received £14m from the fund to reduce Harrogate District Hospital’s carbon footprint by 25%.
North Yorkshire County Council also received just under £2m to improve carbon efficiency in its buildings.