Get HCM digital magazine and ezines FREE
Sign up here ▸
Jobs   News   Features   Products   Magazine      Advertise  
HCM People
Jen Holland

Edinburgh Council will have a £143m budget shortfall by 2028/29 and so must find ways to become more efficient


What appealed to you about the new role?
Having recently worked in the health and social care sector, I wholeheartedly believe in the critical role physical activity can play in improving health and wellbeing outcomes. Going forward, I see the sector as a critical partner in delivering improved outcomes in terms of the health needs of our population.

If we moved the whole system around to thinking about prevention and early intervention, we could have a huge impact on social care and health demand. I’d love to bring that change about.

It starts at a young age and requires us to remove the barriers to sport and physical activity, as well as building communities.

I strongly believe in the positive impact sport and physical activity can have for everyone and I’m passionate about creating opportunities for everyone to get and stay active.

What’s your background?
I’m a qualified accountant and from 2019 was the director of strategic commissioning and partnerships at Scottish Borders Council. Previous to that, I worked with various public sector and charity organisations, including Fife Cultural Trust, NHS Fife and Live Borders.

What are the main challenges?
The biggest challenges facing Edinburgh Leisure are being felt across the whole sector – public sector funding cuts against a backdrop of increasing demand for wider services to meet the changing health and wellbeing landscape, not to mention the need to invest in facilities to ensure they meet the demand of modern users.

Going forward, we need to shout about what we’re doing to tackle inequalities and get people active and living longer in better health. That’s a key part of what leisure trust outcomes are, which often isn’t recognised.

Tell us about Active Communities
The Active Communities programme supports 10,000 people a year to get active. There are specific programmes for different demographics: older adults, including Steady Steps for falls prevention, as well as people on low incomes – including children who have lived in care. It also welcomes children and young people, people living with disabilities, with concessionary rates and carers coming free and programmes to boost mental wellness – including supporting people with dementia.

What are some of the opportunities?
The Active Communities programme will be critical for us moving forward, so I want to do more to champion it. We need to ensure we’re at the table and talking collaboratively about the outcomes we want for this city and how we can support the agenda. We have so many programmes to help people live well, so ultimately prevention and early intervention reduces the need to access NHS or other public services.

There’s also an opportunity to work directly with acute services: hospitals have seen an unprecedented increase in demand and we need to start working more collaboratively with colleagues in the NHS to help reduce this demand.

We also need to harness the data available to lobby effectively, so decision-makers are fully informed about the benefits of physical activity.

The City of Edinburgh has just launched a draft Physical Activity and Sport Strategy to continue the work of reducing inequalities and is currently asking residents for their feedback in order to prioritise spending. Edinburgh Council will have a £143m budget shortfall in by 2028/29 and so must find ways to become more efficient, reduce costs and raise more money, or it may have to reduce or stop providing some services, so it’s important that residents influence these decisions.

The demand for Edinburgh Leisure is really high, so we need to continue with community engagement, marketing campaigns and collaboration to ensure we’re meeting the needs of the people of Edinburgh.

In terms of our estate, we've created a team to look at sustainability and ways to move towards Net Zero.

What trends are you seeing at the moment?
There is a lot of interest in sociable sports, such as pickleball. We offer this at a few of our centres, mainly during the day, by lowering the nets on our badminton courts.

Padel tennis is also on our agenda and we’re looking at opportunities for that and considering other new trends and our response for the future, including Hyrox.

Golf is another area of growth. It was declining pre-COVID, but is on the up now, so we see that as a huge opportunity. We have six courses and are looking at opportunities around coaching, development and adding technology, such as simulated driving ranges.

With £100,000 from SportScotland, we’re upgrading the Edinburgh International Climbing Arena at Ratho, with new bouldering facilities, which will improve opportunities to progress at all levels of the sport.

The redevelopment will make Ratho the only climbing centre in the UK with Olympic-standard facilities for all three climbing disciplines: lead climbing, speed climbing and bouldering.
Edinburgh Leisure operates more than 50 venues across the city

• 17 gym venues, hosting 750+ fitness classes and 250+ gym classes per week

• Royal Commonwealth Pool

• Meadowbank Sports Centre – that opened in 2022, replacing a facility which had previously hosted the Commonwealth Games

• 12 swimming pools including five Victorian baths. Edinburgh’s last remaining Victorian Turkish Baths

• 32 indoor and outdoor tennis courts

• 141 sports pitches

• Three soft play areas

• Europe’s largest climbing arena

• Six golf courses

• Community access to sports facilities and room hire at the city’s 23 high schools

Membership costs (per month):

• Climb membership: £54.50

• Climb and fitness: £77.50

• Full fitness: £59.99

• Fitness class: £45.99

• Gym only: £39.99

• Under 18s memberships: £14.99

• Young adult 18-24: £29.99

• Swim: £45.99

• Soft play: £18.99

• Annual golf season ticket: £588.50

• Golf bolt on: £34.25

Supporting refugees and migrants

Supporting access to all populations is an important part of Edinburgh Leisure’s work. In 2018, the Relocated People Access Programme was created in partnership with the City of Edinburgh Council’s Refugee and Migration team to support relocated individuals new to Edinburgh.

Since April 2023, Edinburgh Leisure has supported 1,192 refugees to be active and there have been 19,502 visits to Edinburgh Leisure activities, with referral rates peaking in 2022.

In recognition of the high numbers of refugees accessing Edinburgh Leisure services and the contribution the programme was making to the refugees’ wellbeing, the City of Edinburgh Council awarded Edinburgh Leisure £100,000 for the programme in 2022-23 and 2023-24.

Edinburgh leisure has 17 gyms in the city
Edinburgh leisure has 17 gyms in the city / photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
Young people should not face any barriers of participation
Young people should not face any barriers of participation / photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
A full adult fitness membership costs £59.99 per month
A full adult fitness membership costs £59.99 per month / photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
/ photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
Targeting prevention and could have a huge impact on health and social care
Targeting prevention and could have a huge impact on health and social care / photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
FEATURED SUPPLIERS

CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right client in under 10 seconds. [more...]

Cornerstone Connect helps Active Blackpool tackle health inequalities
Active Blackpool is deploying Cornerstone Connect, a new digital interface allowing disparate information from multiple systems to be aggregated into one dataset, to support its focus on reducing health inequalities and improving healthy life expectancy. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
Alliance Leisure

Alliance Leisure Services was specifically established to respond to the changing development need [more...]
Serco Leisure

Serco Leisure Operating Limited is one of the UK’s leading national operators of leisure centres, de [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
 
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

03-05 Jul 2026

World Championship in Massage

Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
23-26 Aug 2026

Elevate Spa Riviera Maya Edition

The Riviera Maya Edition Kanai, Playa del Carmen, Mexico
+ More diary  
 
ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
 
HCM
LEISURE OPPORTUNITIES
HEALTH CLUB HANDBOOK
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026
Get HCM digital magazine and ezines FREE
Sign up here ▸
Jobs    News   Products   Magazine
HCM People
Jen Holland

Edinburgh Council will have a £143m budget shortfall by 2028/29 and so must find ways to become more efficient


What appealed to you about the new role?
Having recently worked in the health and social care sector, I wholeheartedly believe in the critical role physical activity can play in improving health and wellbeing outcomes. Going forward, I see the sector as a critical partner in delivering improved outcomes in terms of the health needs of our population.

If we moved the whole system around to thinking about prevention and early intervention, we could have a huge impact on social care and health demand. I’d love to bring that change about.

It starts at a young age and requires us to remove the barriers to sport and physical activity, as well as building communities.

I strongly believe in the positive impact sport and physical activity can have for everyone and I’m passionate about creating opportunities for everyone to get and stay active.

What’s your background?
I’m a qualified accountant and from 2019 was the director of strategic commissioning and partnerships at Scottish Borders Council. Previous to that, I worked with various public sector and charity organisations, including Fife Cultural Trust, NHS Fife and Live Borders.

What are the main challenges?
The biggest challenges facing Edinburgh Leisure are being felt across the whole sector – public sector funding cuts against a backdrop of increasing demand for wider services to meet the changing health and wellbeing landscape, not to mention the need to invest in facilities to ensure they meet the demand of modern users.

Going forward, we need to shout about what we’re doing to tackle inequalities and get people active and living longer in better health. That’s a key part of what leisure trust outcomes are, which often isn’t recognised.

Tell us about Active Communities
The Active Communities programme supports 10,000 people a year to get active. There are specific programmes for different demographics: older adults, including Steady Steps for falls prevention, as well as people on low incomes – including children who have lived in care. It also welcomes children and young people, people living with disabilities, with concessionary rates and carers coming free and programmes to boost mental wellness – including supporting people with dementia.

What are some of the opportunities?
The Active Communities programme will be critical for us moving forward, so I want to do more to champion it. We need to ensure we’re at the table and talking collaboratively about the outcomes we want for this city and how we can support the agenda. We have so many programmes to help people live well, so ultimately prevention and early intervention reduces the need to access NHS or other public services.

There’s also an opportunity to work directly with acute services: hospitals have seen an unprecedented increase in demand and we need to start working more collaboratively with colleagues in the NHS to help reduce this demand.

We also need to harness the data available to lobby effectively, so decision-makers are fully informed about the benefits of physical activity.

The City of Edinburgh has just launched a draft Physical Activity and Sport Strategy to continue the work of reducing inequalities and is currently asking residents for their feedback in order to prioritise spending. Edinburgh Council will have a £143m budget shortfall in by 2028/29 and so must find ways to become more efficient, reduce costs and raise more money, or it may have to reduce or stop providing some services, so it’s important that residents influence these decisions.

The demand for Edinburgh Leisure is really high, so we need to continue with community engagement, marketing campaigns and collaboration to ensure we’re meeting the needs of the people of Edinburgh.

In terms of our estate, we've created a team to look at sustainability and ways to move towards Net Zero.

What trends are you seeing at the moment?
There is a lot of interest in sociable sports, such as pickleball. We offer this at a few of our centres, mainly during the day, by lowering the nets on our badminton courts.

Padel tennis is also on our agenda and we’re looking at opportunities for that and considering other new trends and our response for the future, including Hyrox.

Golf is another area of growth. It was declining pre-COVID, but is on the up now, so we see that as a huge opportunity. We have six courses and are looking at opportunities around coaching, development and adding technology, such as simulated driving ranges.

With £100,000 from SportScotland, we’re upgrading the Edinburgh International Climbing Arena at Ratho, with new bouldering facilities, which will improve opportunities to progress at all levels of the sport.

The redevelopment will make Ratho the only climbing centre in the UK with Olympic-standard facilities for all three climbing disciplines: lead climbing, speed climbing and bouldering.
Edinburgh Leisure operates more than 50 venues across the city

• 17 gym venues, hosting 750+ fitness classes and 250+ gym classes per week

• Royal Commonwealth Pool

• Meadowbank Sports Centre – that opened in 2022, replacing a facility which had previously hosted the Commonwealth Games

• 12 swimming pools including five Victorian baths. Edinburgh’s last remaining Victorian Turkish Baths

• 32 indoor and outdoor tennis courts

• 141 sports pitches

• Three soft play areas

• Europe’s largest climbing arena

• Six golf courses

• Community access to sports facilities and room hire at the city’s 23 high schools

Membership costs (per month):

• Climb membership: £54.50

• Climb and fitness: £77.50

• Full fitness: £59.99

• Fitness class: £45.99

• Gym only: £39.99

• Under 18s memberships: £14.99

• Young adult 18-24: £29.99

• Swim: £45.99

• Soft play: £18.99

• Annual golf season ticket: £588.50

• Golf bolt on: £34.25

Supporting refugees and migrants

Supporting access to all populations is an important part of Edinburgh Leisure’s work. In 2018, the Relocated People Access Programme was created in partnership with the City of Edinburgh Council’s Refugee and Migration team to support relocated individuals new to Edinburgh.

Since April 2023, Edinburgh Leisure has supported 1,192 refugees to be active and there have been 19,502 visits to Edinburgh Leisure activities, with referral rates peaking in 2022.

In recognition of the high numbers of refugees accessing Edinburgh Leisure services and the contribution the programme was making to the refugees’ wellbeing, the City of Edinburgh Council awarded Edinburgh Leisure £100,000 for the programme in 2022-23 and 2023-24.

Edinburgh leisure has 17 gyms in the city
Edinburgh leisure has 17 gyms in the city / photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
Young people should not face any barriers of participation
Young people should not face any barriers of participation / photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
A full adult fitness membership costs £59.99 per month
A full adult fitness membership costs £59.99 per month / photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
/ photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
Targeting prevention and could have a huge impact on health and social care
Targeting prevention and could have a huge impact on health and social care / photo: Edinburgh Leisure / Chris Watt Photography
LATEST NEWS
Industry veterans partner to launch women-only strength brand, LiftHer
An ambitious women’s-only strength and lifting studio concept is set to launch in Dallas this September, with a wider US rollout already in active development.
Omnigym collaborates on an outdoor gym for homeless people
Finnish outdoor fitness equipment specialist, Omnigym, has partnered with charity, Emmaüs Solidarité, to launch an outdoor gym installation at a homeless shelter in Paris.
Virgin Active opens social wellness club in London's Mayfair
Basic-Fit expands German footprint with €52m Wellyou acquisition
Europe’s largest low-cost operator Basic-Fit has agreed to acquire 41 Wellyou clubs in Germany for €52m.
Myzone report shows importance of longevity and social connection
Longevity is the most important motivator for today’s exercisers and social connection is key, according to a report by Myzone.
Until combines multiple disciplines at new Canary Wharf club
Until has opened its fourth club at Canary Wharf, in the iconic YY London building.
Ben Allen appointed managing director at Common Bond
Ben Allen has been appointed managing director at Common Bond. Having set the company up for growth, Robert Rowland now steps into an advisory role.
Industry mourns the loss of Les Mills, a founding father of fitness
Les Mills, whose name became synonymous with one of the world's leading fitness brands, has passed away peacefully at the age of 91.
HCM News: Taking GLP-1s is linked to a decline in physical activity
People taking GLP-1 weight loss medications such as Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound may be losing weight, but they’re also becoming less physically active, according to new research presented at the ENDO 2026 annual meeting of the Endocrine Society
PureGym pilots touchless Recovery Zones in London and Manchester
Low-cost gym operator, PureGym, is trialling recovery zones at two of its UK sites, democratising what was previously a premium experience.
New CIMSPA standards upskill coaches and swimming teachers in mental health
In a milestone moment, mental health has become a core part of CIMSPA’s occupational professional standards.
EoS Fitness is the next budget chain to offer reformer Pilates
US high-value, low-price chain, Eos Fitness, has announced plans to pilot reformer Pilates in three locations this year.
+ More news   
 
FEATURED SUPPLIERS

CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right client in under 10 seconds. [more...]

Cornerstone Connect helps Active Blackpool tackle health inequalities
Active Blackpool is deploying Cornerstone Connect, a new digital interface allowing disparate information from multiple systems to be aggregated into one dataset, to support its focus on reducing health inequalities and improving healthy life expectancy. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
Alliance Leisure

Alliance Leisure Services was specifically established to respond to the changing development need [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

03-05 Jul 2026

World Championship in Massage

Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
23-26 Aug 2026

Elevate Spa Riviera Maya Edition

The Riviera Maya Edition Kanai, Playa del Carmen, Mexico
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS