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A major refurbishment of the museum and art gallery costing £10 million occurred in 2002. [4] As a result, the traditional entrance to the museum and art gallery became the entrance of the Dome, the latter taking the museum's former entrance. The museum is part of Brighton & Hove Museums, comprising [5] Royal Pavilion; Brighton Museum and Art ...
Hove Museum and Art Gallery: Hove: Brighton and Hove: Multiple: Art, contemporary crafts, local history, toys, early cinema artifacts How We Lived Then: Eastbourne: Eastbourne: History: website, authentic Victorian period shops, room settings, displays covering 100 years of shopping and social history Jerwood Gallery: Hastings: Hastings: Art
The Brighton Dome is an arts venue in Brighton, England, that contains the Concert Hall, the Corn Exchange and the Studio Theatre (formerly the Pavilion Theatre). All three venues are linked to the rest of the Royal Pavilion Estate by a tunnel to the Royal Pavilion in Pavilion Gardens and through shared corridors to Brighton Museum.
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. Download coordinates as: KML; ... Brighton Museum & Art Gallery; H. Holy Trinity Church, Brighton; Hove Museum of Creativity
The Royal Pavilion (also known as the Brighton Pavilion) and surrounding gardens is a Grade I listed [1] former royal residence located in Brighton, England. Beginning in 1787, it was built in three stages as a seaside retreat for George, Prince of Wales, who became the Prince Regent in 1811, and King George IV in 1820.
The North Gate. The North Gate of the Royal Pavilion is a Grade II* listed building in Brighton. It is part of the Valley Gardens conservation area. Dating from 1832, it is in the Oriental style, as the main Brighton Pavilion, however it was designed by architect and surveyor Joseph Henry Good, not John Nash the architect of the Pavilion and built in the reign of William IV.
The Merrick Art Gallery launched a GoFundMe campaign to help pay for continued restoration of an intriguing 62-foot long tunnel discovered last year beneath its historic New Brighton building.
Brighton i360 [2] is a 162 m (531 ft) moving observation tower on the seafront of Brighton, East Sussex, England at the landward end of the remains of the West Pier. [3] The tower opened on 4 August 2016. [4] From the fully enclosed viewing pod, visitors experience 360-degree views across Brighton, the South Downs and the English Channel.