Folkestone Sports Centre Swimming Pool to Reopen in Summer 2026
A £2.4m grant which will enable the reopening of swimming facilities at Folkestone Sports Centre has got the go-ahead from Folkestone and Hythe District Council.
Cabinet members have endorsed The Sports Trust’s scheme to revitalise the Radnor Park Avenue site – agreeing to fund essential work including pool and changing room renovation, the addition of solar panels and repairs to the flat roof.
It is expected community swimming, and the associated health and social benefits, will return to Folkestone Sports Centre later in the year with this investment.
The importance of the pool to residents, schools and clubs has been especially evident since its closure in August 2024. A petition highlighting the need to save it attracted some 9,000 signatures.
The Sports Trust, which also runs Three Hills Sports Park and F51, purchased the site last May and promised to “bring it back to life and re-establishing it as an excellent facility”.
Deputy Council Leader Tim Prater said:
“I'm really excited to think that with this investment we will see Folkestone Swimming pool open again this summer.
"With thanks to the officers and Shepway Sports Trust to getting us to this place, this grant should secure the future of swimming at the pool for the coming generations.
"We couldn't have done it alone: if we'd spent them oney we're now using for this grant to buy the pool from the receiver, there would have been nothing left to fix it, modernise it and get it open again. Only by working with others can we deliver for Folkestone Pool.
"And when that's back open, we can then get on with a massive refurbishment to our own Hythe Pool. That will get us back to where we should be: two open, future proofed, fit for use swimming pools in our district that everyone can enjoy.”
Mike Blakemore, Cabinet Member for Community and Collaboration, said:
“This one-off grant will help reopen the much-missed Folkestone Sports Centre as soon as possible and I’m delighted we’re able to support the project.
“It helps address the lack of swimming provision within the district, support the objectives of our new strategic leisure approach, provide local schools with lessons and bring a long-standing community asset back into use.
“Once it is open again, we can proceed with our planned refurbishment of Hythe Pool.”
The agreement has several conditions, including monitoring and clawbacks, which protect the public purse.
The Sports Trust chief executive Dan Hulme added:
“We are incredibly grateful to Folkestone & Hythe District Council for approving this grant and for the continued support they have shown since we stepped in to secure the future of Folkestone Sports Centre and its swimming pool.
“From the outset, there has been a strong shared vision to restore a vital community space where people of all ages can access much-needed sport and leisure facilities. This funding is a significant milestone in that journey.
“It enables us to maintain momentum with both the behind-the-scenes work and the ongoing developments on site, ensuring that the reopening of the swimming pool remains on track.
“A great deal of progress has already been made, and this grant represents an important step forward in bringing the centre back into the heart of the community where it belongs.”