|
Alloa
Public Baths & Gymnasium
This
large building in 'Scottish
Renaissance' style was designed by Glasgow architects J Burnett, Sons &
Campbell and built on the corner of Primrose Street and Primrose
Place as a gift to the town by Mr Thomas Paton.
On 29 April 1898 (the day having been declared a public holiday) after
a grand procession through the town, the baths were officially
opened by
Mr J B
Balfour, QC, MP.
The building had
five main interconnected activity areas, each having also its own individual
entrance. Apart from the main swimming and
plunge pools, there was a large gymnasium, club room, billiards room
and a Turkish and Russian baths suite.
The Turkish baths were in Primrose Place in a two storey section to the far right of the
building. A large gateway led to the boiler house
at street level, and to the square castellated staircase tower
leading, in turn, to the Turkish baths on the first floor.
The Turkish Bath Department extended towards the rear, beneath the domed
area and beyond, the interior being decorated in 'oriental style'. It
included a cooling/dressing room with six cubicles for changing,
each with its own dressing table and couch.
There
were two hot rooms:
a
tepidarium maintained at 140°F, and a
sudatorium maintained at 180°F.
These were heated by a main central radiator with three smaller
supplementary ones. An entrance from the passage
between the cooling-room and tepidarium led to the shampooing room, and
also to the Russian bath. This was heated by steam introduced through
perforated pipes at the discretion of the bathers themselves. There
was also a large plunge bath, together with the department's own
washing and toilet facilities. All the rooms, as elsewhere in the
building, were lit by electricity, and the standard of fittings and
decoration throughout the building, exemplified by this carved dragon
decorating a bannister, was of a very high standard.
In
addition to bearing the cost of the building Mr Paton also undertook
to make good any deficit in running costs for the first three years,
though this additional support may not have been needed. In the first
seven months after the opening, an average of 4,000 admission tickets
were sold for various parts of the building bringing in over £1,000
in revenue and it was being predicted that the Commissioners would
have a surplus of between £400 and £500 at the end of the year.
But thirty or so years
later in 1931, despite a number of minor improvements, the
baths were not being so well used. The local paper complained that Alloa's 'facilities for abounding health'
were not as well used as
they should be, and the public didn't realize how good they were, even
though some bathers came from as far north as Kinross and as far south
as Falkirk.
The temperatures in the hot rooms were now 20°F
higher than originally, and a professional masseur, Mr W C Carruthers
of Harrogate and Glasgow, had been appointed.
By the mid 1960s the baths were desperately in need of refurbishment
and a major modernization plan was drawn up. But in 1965 cuts in
expenditure were deemed necessary and the new scheme was slashed.
Approval was given, though, to some improvements to the Turkish bath,
and the work was started. Unfortunately, the following year, in the
midst of refurbishment, fire broke out and the Turkish baths were
destroyed, although the swimming baths remained open till 1986.
The building now houses
the Spiers Centre which includes a museum. 'The Turkish bath suite has
now gone, the interior has been partly altered, with most of the
tiling overpainted, but many of the dragons remain.
More information about the carved dragons, found throughout the
building, can be found on a page on the
Clackmannanshire Council's website.
|