SearchCurrently displaying: 32 results. Clear the search. You can also search our Questions and Answers.You've searched for:Categories: "Streets" xCategories: "Personal tours from My Brighton exhibit, 1994" x Search term Filter by Area Kemp Town (1)North Laine (14)Old Town (3)Preston (1)Regency (3)Seven Dials (1)St James's Street (2) Sort by: RelevanceTitleOldestNewest The tale of a butcher's boy When I was a boy there used to be (I think) five butchers’ shops in Sydney Street. There is just ... A strange shop These stairs, I think, are very funny with lots of things written on them. I think this shop in particular ... A landscaped underground car park An attractive square from the Regency period which contains a landscaped underground car-park. If the money became available for a ... A really magnificent war memorial On the boundary of Brighton & Hove is the very elegant Regency Square. At the lower end is a really ... Hills, hills, hills This is another aspect of Brighton – the hills. There are hills everywhere and my car doesn’t like them. ... Beautiful symmetry If you go to the top of Brighton Race Hill and look to the west there is an extremely good ... A very high-class street This is St James’s Street and it’s the oldest shopping street in the town. It was built by Kemp to ... North Road Timber Company The North Road Timber Company is part of a lovely theme that runs through the North Laine. Timber was one ... Brighton's very own Jaguar? This building is in between the Royal Albion Hotel and the Royal York Buildings, not far from the seafront near ... A dingy alleyway Although Brighton is a place of bright sunshine and open skies and colour, some of the nicest parts from my ... A little patch of magic The view from Highcroft Villas is very special to me. Just on the bend is an allotment area surrounded by ... Nuts about fruit and veg This is the Infinity Foods shop. It’s the first of its kind we have seen whilst in England. There’s obviously ... A tiny patch of green A greenhouse, under an apple tree, in the middle of town – this is Trafalgar Terrace. It’s a tiny patch ... Secondhand clothes: a fashion statement Upper Gardner Street’s second hand clothing! People still buy from here today, but not as regularly as they would have done ... Painted doors The doors in Brighton. I like them because of the symmetry and the colours and the way that the houses ... War Memorial “This picture is taken in Old Steine of a marble obelisk war memorial to soldiers of the Royal Sussex Regiment ... A surreal shop window Surrealism wanted to shock people and did so by mixing together objects from different contexts. In the North Laine that’s ... Our first glimpse of the sea This is Atlingworth Street and this photo is of particular significance for us because it was our first glimpse of ... A family business 17 to 18a Bond Street…this beautiful large building was my grandfather’s premises. He had a furniture auctioneer’s rooms. They were ... A beautiful bollard This is Brighton at its best – a beautiful bollard. It could have been made out of sugar. It’s fine ... The most lively area in Brighton I really like walking in the North Laine. I think it is the most lively area of Brighton. It’s always ... Magnificent architecture As we travel eastward on Brighton seafront we come to the beautiful symmetry and magnificent architecture of Sussex Square and ... It's like stepping back in time This is Meeting House Lane, which has many jewellers and antique shops. I am a great fan of antiques and ... Home Sweet Home Home sweet home – Foundry Street! This is looking from the landing window of our house, across the 24ft space ... Two up - two down cottages In this photograph I let my imagination completely run wild…as…I assume these to be railway cottages. I imagine railway staff…coming ... Deb's Deli Deb’s Deli in Gardner Street is a kind of microcosm of Brighton. It’s cosmopolitan, it’s suave, it’s ethnic in the ... A shop retailing architectural salvage With a wealth of tradesmen practicing a whole variety of crafts in the town it’s no wonder that there are ... Patchings Builders Yard: dates from 19th century Patchings the Builders’ old yard, Portland Street, most likely dates from the 19th Century. The brick and wood building seen ... A sedate aunty I like Pelham Square. It’s quiet, it’s green, it’s sedate. It’s not raucous like the rest of the North Laine. ... A survivor amongst dereliction I really like this building because it’s a survivor. It’s survived in Pelham Street. North, East and West of here ... The Victorian meets the Georgian What we’re looking at is a rather splendid Victorian acanthus capital that suddenly butts onto a piece of defensive ironwork ... Romantic encounters “Now this might not look very interesting, but it’s known locally as ‘Quadrophenia Alley’. It featured in the 1970s film ...