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Long Street Baths: A quiet old lady, dressed in grey, who has provided solace for more than a century

Long Street Baths: A quiet old lady, dressed in grey, who has provided solace for more than a century
There's always time for some nostalgic playfulness in the pool at the Long Street Baths. (Photo: Helen Walne)

Cape Town’s historical 113-year-old Long Street Baths are a peaceful, welcoming haven in the city.

There was talk once – serious talk – of demolishing the Long Street Baths.

It was the 1960s. Increased traffic was putting pressure on the nexus where the mountain end of Long Street connects with Buitensingel, Orange and Kloof streets, and plans were afoot to ease congestion. Besides, the pools were 60 years old and they had deteriorated enough to justify closing forever the wooden doors under the arches, above which the words “Baths” and “Baddens” (in Afrikaans) were moulded in Art Nouveau lettering.

Build a new indoor pool in Oranjezicht, just above the old reservoir, the argument went.

“The Oranjezicht project will replace the old Long Street bath which is to be demolished to make way for the Mill Street ring road linking De Waal Drive with Buitengracht,” The Argus of 24 April 1970 reports. “A start will be made on the Oranjezicht bath later this year.”

But later that year came and went, and the baths remained in place. Now, more than 50 years on, the baths are still there.

Still used.

Still loved.

The pool is used by different types of water lovers, from casual chatters and waders to sporty lap-counters and gleeful children. (Photo: Helen Walne)

R&R for a tenacious survivor

They recently reopened after more than a year of being closed. Roof sheets had been ripped off during one of Cape Town’s epic wind spells, and the City of Cape Town used the unexpected hiatus in normal public activity during lockdown to do wide-ranging repairs.

It spent R1.1-million on replacing the rusted steel piping from the plant room to the filters, repairing and servicing steel filter tanks, repairing heating units, their pumps and the damaged roof, and doing an electrical assessment, among other things.

“[The fixes] required specialist knowledge and skills,” said Zahid Badroodien, who was the City’s mayoral committee member for community services and health until the recent municipal elections.

“Long Street is one of the few pools that operates all year and [it] is well used by recreational and professional bathers, swimming clubs and various schools, and activities and programmes such as underwater hockey and water aerobics take place. We are pleased that these activities can now resume with the observation of Covid regulations.”

The fixes did not extend to the aesthetics.

The century-old Long Street Turkish Baths have been closed since the beginning of lockdown. (Photo: Brenton Geach)

The enormous mural painted on the wall closest to Table Mountain is faded and in some places the brickwork is peeking through. The stalls in the changing rooms look a little worse for wear and some of the locker doors are hanging off their hinges. But the floors and toilets are sparklingly clean. A mop in the women’s changing rooms is often taken up by women who’ve trailed water in from the pool, contributing to a feeling that this shared space, no matter how shabby, is deserving of its users’ care.

An air of quiet order and respectful community is possibly the 113-year-old space’s greatest pulling power.

A safe place

Cape Town photographer, writer and filmmaker Yazeed Kamaldien, an avid recreational swimmer, has only good memories of the Long Street Baths. He says the main reason Long Street is different from Cape Town’s other pools is because it is indoors.

He used to work as a journalist in St George’s Mall and would sometimes pop in after work for a swim. “I would sometimes ask someone, usually an aunty with her children, to watch my bag, as I usually had my phone with me. I always feel a sense of community, of belonging, when going to public swimming pools, especially the Long Street Baths, as the families that I would see there were from Bo-Kaap. I know people who live in Bo-Kaap, so it is like seeing people I know, even though I might not actually know their names.

“I remember once also sitting outside in the sun and a group of children came out, and just eavesdropping on their jokes and commentary on each other was funny. It always felt like a safe family space.”

It’s not a pool for show-offs or champions or posers or pouters. (Photo: Helen Walne)

For the first 80 years of the pool’s life, however, neither the people who lived in the Bo-Kaap, nor any Capetonians who were not white, were able to use the Long Street Baths. Instead, white people who lived in the flats nearby often wandered over in their slippers for a swim and a shower, so that for years the baths were known as “the slipper baths”.

In the 1970s, the City managed 12 segregated pools. There are now 35 pools in Cape Town, from Khayelitsha to Sea Point, and from Muizenberg to Parow.

Not a pool for posers

Helen Walne, well-known Cape Town underwater photographer, says the Long Street Baths are a sanctuary in the city.

“It’s something to do with the hushed acoustics, the way light floods in through the windows at the far end, and the soft colours of the fading murals. Everything is muted and gentle and spacious.”

On a recent Tuesday morning, six women – two in swimming hijabs, three in Speedos, one in a bikini – swam quiet lengths in water of a pleasant 26ºC. Two female lifeguards looked on from the stands.

Some years ago, the women of the Bo-Kaap wrested this one day of the week as a women-only swim day.

The enclosed swimming pool, with its soft lighting and faded mural, offers a gentle sanctuary for the world-weary. (Photo: Helen Walne)

Walne says this is not a pool for show-offs or champions or posers or pouters. “It’s for bobbing kids and elderly backstrokers, for new-love teens and Saturday families. And it’s one of the few spaces in the city where women can feel completely safe and free, with the pool open to women only between 10am and 2pm on a Tuesday. We owe a lot to those who campaigned for this. It’s a rare taste of what normality should be.”

The movement of the pellucid water, bright as a squeaky-clean window, turns the lane lines into a doctor’s scribble on the bottom of the pool. There’s a milky murkiness to some pools that are shared by many people, but the water at Long Street seems to maintain an entrancing clarity.

“It has a quality no other pool in the city has. It’s so clear, you can see the bottom shelving away, and it feels gentle and infused with some sort of magic. I love the way the thin grouting of the tiles makes crazy shapes on the surface.”

‘Many people don’t know it exists’

The Long Street Baths are a mix of Victorian, Edwardian and Art Nouveau architecture, and the lettering on signs in various places indoors reflects a long history of changing needs, times, rules and ideas. The 25m pool was first built in 1908, and about 20 years later the Turkish baths were added on. Here people could come for a steam bath and a massage.

This service has fallen by the wayside in recent years.

The protracted hand-wringing that almost saw the baths being obliterated in the 1970s finally came to a head when a resolution was made in 1985 to improve the facility. In 1990, the city council spent R2.2-million on a major upgrade, adding a glass section on the east wall with an outside area for bathers to sit in the sun. Originally, there were wooden changing stalls all along the south wall, but these were taken out to make more space.

After the 1990 renovations, tickets cost R2 for adults and 80 cents for children. Adults now pay R32 and children R18 for a swim. Monthly tickets are available, too.

The pool has been used for many years by the Walmers Swimming Club and the Cape Town Underwater Hockey Club.

Elize Viviers, former player in the multi-gold-winning Elite Women’s team and current coach of the South African Elite Women’s Team, says the club’s relationship with the pool and its people over the years has been warm and reciprocal.

“If you spend your life beside pools you end up leaving swimming costumes behind. The only pool I have ever swum in where my bathing costume would be in lost-and-found if I left it behind was at the Long Street Baths.”

Women enjoy having the place to themselves on a Tuesday, when the Long Street Baths are open to women only between 10am and 2pm. (Photo: Helen Walne)

Yet, for all its popularity, and its longevity, the pool remains one of those secret city oases. In an interview in 2015, Sadick “Dickie” Holtman, who’d worked at the baths for 30 years before his retirement, said: “People walk past every day and never look inside. They’re amazed when they see this place for the first time. Many people don’t know it exists.”

But there it is, tucked away between a petrol station and one of Cape Town’s oldest backpacker lodges. It is surrounded by churches and mosques, bars and restaurants; a quiet old lady, dressed in grey, who has provided solace and exercise and friendship and fun for more than a century.

Kamaldien says the Long Street Baths are special to Cape Town.

“It’s very much a part of the lives of Capetonians. Going for a swim is such a lekker thing to do. It feels like a ritual almost – go for a swim and then get some takeaways afterwards, usually with a massive serving of slap chips.” DM168

This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper which is available for R25 at Pick n Pay, Exclusive Books and airport bookstores. For your nearest stockist, please click here.

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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Barbara Mommen says:

    A wonderful good news story in a country where most such spaces have been left to go to ruin. A city treasure.

  • Elize Viviers says:

    Lovely Karin, just lovely!!
    Your article makes me love and treasure the pool even more, the pool has enabled the Cape Town Underwater Hockey Club to hold its own nationally over the years, their latest success, the Ladies and Men’s teams taking gold at the South African Underwater Hockey Interclub Championships in Durban at the beginning of December 2021!
    Thank you Long Street!! We salute you!

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