Like Paula Jones (Letters, March 22), I hope Brighton and Hove City Council looks to the Triangle leisure centre in Burgess Hill for inspiration when redeveloping the King Alfred centre.

We have a severely disabled son and an able-bodied daughter and it is often difficult to find family activities to suit all in Brighton and Hove, especially on cold, rainy days.

The King Alfred has no disabled parking and the mixed-sex changing rooms are full of peepholes. The Prince Regent provides disabled changing areas which have to be accessed by a succession of manual doors and thin corridors (unlike the non-disabled changing areas, which involve negotiating just one door).

Both pools are underheated, often dirty and not very interesting.

The Triangle is more expensive but it is warm, great fun for kids and adults and has fully equipped, truly accessible designated disabled changing rooms.

Judging by the queues to get in at weekends, I would think it also makes far more money than our local pools.

-J Teague, Holland Street, Brighton