Tragic Fire Destroys Hungary's Iconic Cave Baths

  • 10 Sep 2024 4:54 AM
Tragic Fire Destroys Hungary's Iconic Cave Baths
A fire burning down the entire roof structure of a medical bloc at the Miskoltapolca thermal spa complex has been extinguished, a deputy spokeswoman of the regional disaster management authority said on Saturday. Nobody has been injured.

The 800sqm building's roof caught fire on Friday evening, Zsuzsanna Rinyu told MTI.

Firefighters arrived after 7.30pm at the scene where the fire broke out in the 2nd floor of the aquatherapy department and spread further to the roof, she said.

The rescue operation was carried out with ten vehicles and a team of 40 firefighters and was concluded after midnight, Rinyu added. "It managed to prevent the fire's spreading to the nearby forest".

Meanwhile, the new, incoming mayor of county seat Miskolc told a press conference on Saturday that the city would turn to the central government for help since the case "concerns lost tourism revenues and people's jobs".

Jozsef Toth-Szantai said the next step to follow was to conduct an investigation to establish the cause of the fire and the damage caused.

Hungary Around the Clock reports: Gov't Promises to Help Rebuild Miskolc Cave Baths

The government will provide all possible help for rebuilding the cave baths that burnt down in Miskolctapolca on Friday, Economy Minister Márton Nagy told Miskolc’s mayor-elect József Tóth-Szántai.

Nagy noted that the livelihoods of the staff and their families are in jeopardy as the baths – a major tourist attraction – are temporarily closing due to the restoration works and cannot receive any guests.

Tóth-Szántai told Nagy that the company spa operator assures staff that they can keep their jobs through reorganisation.

He said tourists with reservations will be accommodated and cared for in other spas in Miskolc.

About the Cave bath:

The thermal water (temperature: 30°C/86°F) is reputed to reduce joint pain, and since it has a lower salt content than most thermal waters (around 1000 mg/liter), people can bathe in it for much longer, practically an unlimited amount of time. The Cave Bath can be visited all year long, except for January.

The cave and the thermal spring have been known since ancient times, but Tapolca became a popular bathing place only after the Ottoman occupation of Hungary (16th-17th century). During this time the area belonged to the Greek Orthodox abbey of Görömböly; the development of Tapolca into a bathing place was the idea of the abbot in 1711.

He also brought doctors from Kassa, today Košice, Slovakia to examine the beneficial effects of the water. Three pools and an inn were constructed in 1723. The cave itself was not used yet, as the pools were outside.

The water was colder than it is now, because the cold water springs of Tapolca (which now play an important role in providing Miskolc with drinking water) were used too. By the mid-18th century, after a short period of popularity, the bath was neglected and by the 19th century the buildings were in ruins.

In 1837, the new abbot of Görömböly had the buildings restored and expanded. He also had the first indoor pool (though still outside the cave) built, but only for wealthy guests.

Inside the cave bath

In the early 20th century, the growing city of Miskolc bought the area from the Greek Orthodox Church not only because of the thermal water but also because of the drinking water source (which now provides half of the city's water supply).

In the following years, new public baths were built. In 1934, Tapolca was officially recognised as a spa town. In 1939, the construction of a new bathing house began. During the construction, several archaeological findings were unearthed, and a new, previously unknown water spring was found with a water temperature of 31.5°C. The thermal bath was opened in 1941 but the Cave Bath itself was opened only on 14 May 1959.

Since then, the bath complex has been expanded several times. The outdoor pool and the characteristic, seashell-shaped roof before it were built in 1969. In the 1980s, new rooms and corridors were built, and warmer pools (34°C and 36°C) were constructed. The newest expansion of the bath complex started in 1998.

Click here to virtually visit the Cave Bath

MTI Stock Photo - for illustrative purposes only

Source: 
MTI - The Hungarian News Agency, founded in 1881.

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