The Newsletter of the Regency Society of Brighton & Hove

The Newsletter of the Regency Society of Brighton & Hove

Regency Review The Newsletter of the Regency Society of Brighton & Hove Issue 6 January 2003 Big changes to come across the city t a special meeting in June 2002, Athe Planning Applications Sub- Committee recommended that the Council grant permission for the PROPOSED COMMUNITY STADIUM AT VILLAGE WAY, FALMER, subject to some addi- tional information from the applicant, which has now been submitted. This will be discussed at the Committee’s 15 January meeting. Council officers have recommended that planning permission be approved. The Community Stadium applica- tion, and the application for an alterna- tive transport interchange to the north of Village Way which was refused by Lewes District Council, have been called in by the Secretary of State for his decision. A joint Local Inquiry in respect of the above and the relevant draft Local Plan Policy, SR25, will begin at Hove Town Hall on 18 February. The proposed Falmer stadium: scale can be judged by the size of people at the bottom in health of any very elderly patient is Regency Society Committee attended In December 2002, The Planning always a shock and the present state of a ceremony to celebrate the completed Applications Sub-Committee recommend- the building is leading to ‘soul REFURBISHMENT OF ed approval for development proposals searching’ among many of us. THE CLOCK TOWER. for the BRIGHTON STATION GOODS In November, The Regency The golden ball, restored YARD SITE. The Regency Society Society Committee wrote to in gold leaf as recom- Committee is very concerned by this deci- Simon Thurley, chairman of mended by the Society, sion and has written to the Government English Heritage, to enquire rose to the top of its col- Office for the South East (GOSE), whether he would support umn at 10.00am, for the requesting that it be called in for determi- the return of the Pier to its first time in more than a nation by the Secretary of State. original ‘promenade pier’ century. All other decora- English Heritage does not support the form, to reduce running and tive features that were application for the following reasons. It maintenance costs and hence originally gilded have does not significantly enhance the trans- necessitate a smaller amount of also been restored in gold port hub at the station; it represents merely ‘enabling development’. leaf, but the new mecha- an outline application for the site, with Mr Thurley has replied that nism has suffered some more detailed proposals included only for this would still require a size- teething troubles during the ‘core’ area, which is less than half the able new development. EH and recent cold weather and site; and the proposed development would the Council are awaiting the further adjustments to have a detrimental effect on the nearby consultant’s report on financial the clock’s machinery are Grade 1 listed St. Bartholomew’s Church information from St Modwen being made. and the Grade 2 listed Railway Station and the West Pier Trust in buildings. We await a decision from support of the new foreshore GOSE. development in their applica- Both BLACK ROCK tion. We too await this report and THE KING ALFRED with considerable interest. are subject to re-develop- The partial collapse of the concert ment proposals, follow- hall on 29 December 2002 had been ing development briefs forecast by the WEST PIER TRUST’S On 17 December 2002, engineers. However, a serious decline representatives of the Continued on page 2 Society backs Seaside Album display he Regency Society is backing a new photographic exhibi- by William Constable, Brighton’s first photographer; and the Ttion at Brighton Museum & Art gallery – A Seaside Album: earliest known photographs of the Royal Pavilion, taken by photographs and memory. It runs from 10 May until 8 October William Henry Fox Talbot in 1846. A remarkable series of and we are delighted to announce that there will be a private images by Edward Fox Jnr illustrates the town in the late 1850s reception purely for members of the Society in June. and 1860s and studies by William Mason Jnr from around 1860 The history of photography in Brighton mirrors the history of introduce local types: fishermen, domestic staff at work, artisans this medium in Britain. Leading pioneers set up studios here, or and itinerant musicians. From the turn of the century, a sequence visited, attracted by the fashionable clientele and the clear skies. of snapshots by George Ruff Jnr captures the life and bustle of In later years, both distinguished exponents and commercial the beach and prom- photographers came too: they captured the popular mood, cre- enades. ated memorable studies and recorded the changing topography Twentieth-cen- of the town. tury visitors of note, A Seaside Album: Photographs and Memory reveals a story whose photographs feature in the exhibi- tion, include Cecil Beaton who cel- ebrates Brighton’s Regency past. Bill Brandt and Henri Cartier Bresson cap- ture the pleasures of the beach and the amusement arcade; Roger Mayne and Tony Ray-Jones explore new ways of depicting the faded glories of the post-war seaside resort; and Jim Cooke reveals the layered landscapes of 1990s Brighton. Philippe Garner is widely recognised as a leading connois- seur and authority on photographs. He grew up in Brighton and of changing times, changing attitudes and changing artistic his interest dates back to his teens in the early sixties. He was visions from the 1840s to the early 1990s, through the power of responsible for sales of photographs at Sotheby’s from 1971, the photographic image and the spirit of Brighton. when it became the first auction house to establish regular sales The exhibition presents around 150 original photographs of in this medium; and was a Senior Director Senior Specialist in Brighton and Hove, drawn from Philippe Garner’s remarkable 20th Century Decorative Arts and Design, and Photographs at collection, assembled over the past 30 years. Sotheby’s until June 2002. Exploring the qualities peculiar to photographs, the exhibi- •The private reception for members at the exhibition takes place tion includes beautifully composed and finely crafted prints, on Tuesday 17 June 2003. We are honoured that Philippe together with everyday photographs of more modest intent, yet Garner has agreed to be present and to give an introductory with a considerable emotional charge. The common thread that talk. Further details will be sent to members nearer the time. links the photographs on display is the activity, architecture and people of this colourful and intriguing seaside landscape. The exhibition shows historic daguerreotypes from the 1840s and consultations initiated by the City Advisory Consultation Panel. Our views There are planning applications and Council’s Leisure and Regeneration are embargoed at present, while the potential planning applications for a teams. At Black Rock three different Council assesses the financial implica- number of TALL BUILDINGS on sites schemes have been submitted and the tions of each proposal. At least one of the throughout the city, from the Marina to Regency Society is represented on the schemes could be developed into a use- the King Alfred, including several close ful, sustainable leisure and to the city centre. The Regency Society health project. We under- Committee, together with other groups, stand that four consortia has suggested that these should not be have submitted proposals considered until a policy for tall buildings for the re-development of is in place, to avoid the mistakes of the the King Alfred site with a 1960s and 1970s. The Architects’ Panel combination of sports and and the Conservation Areas Advisory leisure buildings and hous- Group have discussed guidelines suggest- ing, in accordance with ed by the Council planners, but it is likely the Council’s brief. We that the pressure to make decisions will await the submissions with outweigh the requests for a more studied interest. appraisal to be made first. John Small, honorary secretary Gutsy, courageous, tolerant – and intolerant r Seldon, Headmaster of Brighton DCollege, author of a clutch of suc- cessful books, including biographies of Margaret Thatcher and John Major, has turned his provocative, needlesharp eye towards Brighton and written, in associa- tion with Matthew Nurse, Edward Twohig and Chris Horlock, a highly stimulating, controversial and challenging account of Brighton & Hove as it was, is, and might be in the future. The chapter headings give instant clues about the tone and popularist approach adopted by the author. Chapter One, The Rape of the City, leads the reader through surveys of the history of the two towns and studies of seaside resorts worldwide, to an appraisal of the elements that make such places successful. Finally, he describes a highly controver- sial vision of the future, full of skyscrap- ers, an international airport, a museum of contemporary art and many other innova- tory ideas. It ends with “establishing the city as a thug free zone”: no controversy there. This is an unashamedly popularist production, glossy pages, full of alluring images, almost all in colour. Bold labels, stuck seemingly with casu- al informality, proclaim that this or that historic building has been “demolished”, “destroyed by fire”, “cleared for develop- ment” or “obliterated”, setting the scene for the survivors of “the glorious 18th and 19th centuries”. Dr Seldon is not at all shy about pro- claiming his own preferences: the city’s Top Ten Buildings include his own College, as well as my own home, which is very comforting to us both. At the very top, at Number One, as “Top of the Pops” used to proclaim, is the On a more positive note, the Ten Best offshore Bilbao Guggenheim perhaps, dear old collapsing West Pier. 20th Century Buildings include the King which he advocates in his Seaside Cities Later in the book, after a vain search & Queen Pub, Marlborough Place, a con- Worldwide section? for evidence of comparable quality in troversial entry in the Regency Society’s You know, I am fascinated by this 20th century developments, Dr Seldon own 20th Century poster compilation.

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