List of landmarks and buildings of Brighton and Hove

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The Brighton Marine Palace and Pier

The city of Brighton and Hove (made up of the towns of Brighton and Hove) on the south coast of England, UK has a number notable buildings and landmarks.

Extant[]

Buildings and structures[]

The Royal Pavilion
Brunswick estate and Embassy Court.
  • Bedford Hotel, the present building being a replacement for one of Brighton's oldest and grandest hotels
  • Brighton Centre, a concert venue and conference centre known for hosting conferences for many of the major political parties of the UK
  • Brighton Marina
  • Brighton Pier (also known as Palace Pier, and as Brighton Marine Palace and Pier)
  • Brighton railway station
  • The British Engineerium
  • The Brunswick estate, Hove (a Regency housing development)
  • Churchill Square, the largest shopping centre in Brighton
  • The Clock Tower, a prominent landmark between Brighton Station and the seafront
  • The County Ground, home of Sussex County Cricket Club
  • Duke of York's Picture House, the oldest continuously operating cinema in Britain
  • Embassy Court, a starkly modernist 1930s design adjacent to Regency Brunswick Terrace; was a prototype for a proposed redevelopment of the entire seafront. Was refurbished in the mid-2000s.
  • Falmer Stadium, the home of Brighton and Hove Albion Football Club
  • The Grand Hotel
  • The Hanbury Arms incorporates as its ballroom a former mausoleum in an Indian architectural style, built for Edward Sassoon
  • Hove railway station
  • Kemp Town (a Regency housing development)
  • The Lanes, an area of Brighton known for its small, twisting series of pedestrianised streets housing many independent shops
  • Marine Gate, a 1930s apartment block in the International/Modern style on the eastern approach to Brighton.
  • The Metropole Hotel
  • The New England Quarter
  • North Laine, sometimes incorrectly referred to as "North Laines", North Laine is a group of streets known for their many independent and bohemian shops
  • The Pylons, a pair of three-sided stone pillars either side of the southbound A23 road marking the boundary point of Brighton, and carrying a message of welcome for visitors
  • The Regency Town House
  • The Royal Pavilion
  • Sassoon Mausoleum
  • Stanmer House
  • The University of Sussex, a radical 1960s campus design by Sir Basil Spence, some of which is listed
  • The West Pier
  • The Western Pavilion, self-made home of prolific local architect Amon Henry Wilds, son of Amon Wilds and sometime working partner of Charles Busby
  • White Lodge, The Cliff, Roedean; an atypically small house by Sir Edwin Lutyens, built for Victoria Sackville-West
  • Withdean Stadium

Churches and places of worship[]

This is a small list of the most notable. See also List of places of worship in Brighton and Hove.

Galleries[]

Murals[]

Parks and other open air attractions[]

Extinct[]

  • Brighton and Rottingdean Seashore Electric Railway ("Daddy Long Legs")
  • The Royal Suspension Chain Pier

Proposed and/or planned[]

  • The i360 (a.k.a. The Brighton Eye)

See also[]

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