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Map of East Sussex, UK with Brighton and Hove highlighted. Equirectangular map projection on WGS 84 datum, with N/S stretched 155% ... Coastline and administrative ...
Brighton's Quakers run the Friends Meeting House in the Lanes. [118] There is an active Unitarian community based in a Grade II listed building in New Road. [119] Brighton has six listed Roman Catholic churches; St John the Baptist's Church (1835) in Kemptown is the earliest surviving Roman Catholic church in the city. [120]
East of Pagham the coastline becomes more open until the man-made Shoreham Harbour. At Brighton the coastal plain is replaced by chalk cliffs which culminate in the Seven Sisters and the promontory of Beachy Head. The Pevensey Levels and a small area of flat coastline west of Hastings separate the cliffs of Beachy Head from the cliffs east of ...
Brighton Beach is a neighborhood in the southern portion of the New York City borough of Brooklyn, ... 1873 map of Brighton Beach West Brighton, Brooklyn, ...
The City of Brighton and Hove consists of many districts, a stretch of coast and some downland areas. Just to the south of Brighton and Hove in the English Channel is the Rampion Wind Farm , which provides renewable energy to the country.
The coastal towns of Sussex with neighbouring Hampshire and south Kent including the settlements that make up the Brighton and Hove built-up area are the sunniest places in the United Kingdom. [3] The coast has consistently more sunshine than the inland areas: sea breezes, blowing off the sea, tend to clear any cloud from the coast. [4]
The West Coastway line runs almost alongside or within a few miles of the south coast of Sussex and Hampshire, between Brighton and Southampton. [1] [2] [3] East of Portsmouth the line was electrified (using 750 V DC third rail) by the Southern Railway before the Second World War in two stages: Brighton to West Worthing in 1933, [4] [5]
Brighton to Newhaven Cliffs is a 165.4-hectare (409-acre) biological and geological Site of Special Scientific Interest and Geological Conservation Review site, [2] which stretches along the coast between Brighton and Newhaven in East Sussex. [1] [3] An area of 16.4 hectares (41 acres) is the Castle Hill, Newhaven Local Nature Reserve [4]