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Ovingdean became part of the Borough of Brighton in 1928, and is still a small village surrounded by fields. Its 12th-century flint-built church is considered the oldest building in the city of Brighton and Hove. The tower, with "Sussex Cap" spire, was added in the 13th century, and a porch was added during a 19th-century restoration. [25] [26 ...
Regency Square is a large early 19th-century residential development on the seafront in Brighton, part of the British city of Brighton and Hove.Conceived by speculative developer Joshua Hanson as Brighton underwent its rapid transformation into a fashionable resort, the three-sided "set piece" [1] of 69 houses and associated structures was built between 1818 and 1832.
[1] [4] (The house has sometimes been incorrectly described as newly built in 1764, such was the extent of the revamp.) [8] [9] Payne and his descendants lived in the house for many years, but in 1926, as suburban residential development began to reach the old village of Patcham, Brighton Corporation (predecessor of the present Brighton and ...
Park Crescent is a mid-19th-century residential development in the Round Hill area of Brighton, part of the English city of Brighton and Hove.The horseshoe-shaped, three-part terrace of 48 houses was designed and built by one of Brighton's most important architects, Amon Henry Wilds; by the time work started in 1849 he had 35 years' experience in the town.
Kemp Town Estate, also known as Kemp Town, is a 19th-century Regency architecture residential estate in the east of Brighton in East Sussex, England. It consists of Arundel Terrace , Lewes Crescent, Sussex Square , Chichester Terrace, and the Kemp Town Enclosures (the gardens).
This was the first of nineteen developments in Blackheath and of thirteen within the Cator estate. [ 12 ] [ 15 ] Constructed between 1954 and 1956, the development comprised 61 flats of type A, B and C and, like Parkleys, care was taken to retain the estate's mature trees.
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The frontage to East Street is similar to many of the buildings on that ancient, important street, where "modern shopfronts [have been] inserted into the ground floors of Victorian shells". [69] The Grade II-listed section fronting East Street was designed in about 1866 by Henry Jarvis in a High Victorian Gothic style. It rises to four storeys ...