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Royal Crescent, Brighton

Royal Crescent is a crescent-shaped terrace of houses on the seafront in Brighton, part of the English city of Brighton and Hove. Built in the late 18th and early 19th century as a speculative development on the open cliffs east of Brighton by a wealthy merchant, the 14 lodging houses formed the town's eastern boundary until about 1820. It was the seaside resort's first planned architectural composition, and the first built intentionally to face the sea. The variety of building materials used include black glazed mathematical tiles—a characteristic feature of Brighton's 18th-century architecture. English Heritage has listed the crescent at Grade II* for its architectural and historical importance. An adjacent five-storey building, formerly the Royal Crescent Hotel but now converted into flats with the name Royal Crescent Mansions, is listed separately at Grade II.

Royal Crescent
The crescent from the southeast
LocationRoyal Crescent, Marine Parade, Brighton, Brighton and Hove, East Sussex BN2 1AL, England
Coordinates50°49′07″N 0°07′31″W / 50.8185°N 0.1253°W / 50.8185; -0.1253
Built1798–1807
Built forJ.B. Otto
ArchitectUnknown
Architectural style(s)Classical
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official nameNos. 1–14 (Consecutive) Royal Crescent and attached railings
Designated13 October 1952
Reference no.1380838
Location of Royal Crescent within central Brighton
Royal Crescent Mansions
The building from the southeast
LocationRoyal Crescent Mansions, 100–101 Marine Parade, Brighton, Brighton and Hove, East Sussex BN2 1AX, England
Coordinates50°49′07″N 0°07′31″W / 50.8185°N 0.1253°W / 50.8185; -0.1253
BuiltEarly 19th century
Rebuilt1848–1857 (as hotel)
Architectural style(s)Classical
Listed Building – Grade II
Official nameRoyal Crescent Hotel and attached walls and railings
Designated20 August 1971
Reference no.1381755

History edit

Brighton's transformation from fishing village to high-class, fashionable spa town and resort happened in the second half of the 18th century and was prompted by several factors. Sea-bathing and drinking seawater became an upper-class fad, encouraged by the publication in 1750 of local doctor Richard Russell's book on the subject.[1] The good climate—sunny, mild and breezy—also became widely known when Brighton's first guidebook[2] was published by Anthony Relhan in 1761.[3] Road improvements encouraged visitors from London and elsewhere: the road from London to Brighton, notorious for its poor (sometimes impassable) condition,[4] was turnpiked throughout its length in 1770.[5] The arrival of royalty and the effects of their patronage then gave the town such prestige that it became Britain's largest and most important seaside resort.[6] The Duke of Cumberland lived in the town from 1779; the Prince of Wales first visited him in 1783[7] (although he may also have come in search of Brighton's reputed health benefits);[8] and he liked it so much that he came back every year and eventually took up residence at the Royal Pavilion.[7]

Late 18th-century Brighton became popular with speculative developers and builders: either professional builders who bought some land, started erecting houses themselves or using their own men, and tried to sell the remaining land at a profit as construction work continued—this was more common; or rich speculators from other industries who bought land (sometimes from a builder in the circumstances just described) and commissioned them to build houses to their specifications.[9] J.B. Otto, a merchant who owned plantations in the West Indies, was an example of the latter.[9][10] In 1798, he bought a wide east–west strip of land on the clifftop beyond the eastern edge of the built-up area, about 0.5 miles (0.8 km) east of the Royal Pavilion,[11] and hired an architect (whose identity is not known) and builders to create a crescent of houses which could be let to long-term visitors.[12][13]

Work started in the same year; the ends of the crescent were started first.[11] The project was then delayed when Otto ran out of money; he returned to the West Indies to secure more funds, then came back to Brighton and supervised the completion of the crescent, which happened in 1807.[11] Unlike many contemporary and later developments in Brighton, Otto was able to take his time to complete it because he was not wholly dependent on it for his financial success: his plantations were still his main source of income.[14]

The crescent of 14 houses was the first to be built facing the sea and to be designed in harmony with it.[12][15][16][17] Brighton's 18th-century development had been haphazard and unplanned, and Royal Crescent also represented the first unified architectural design, planned as a set-piece and overseen from start to finish by one man.[10][11][12] The grand scale was intended to attract middle- and upper-class residents, both permanent and seasonal,[18] and it was immediately successful: early tenants included the Rice family, a brewing dynasty from London.[19][20]

In 1802, Otto attempted to impress the Prince of Wales—probably with a view to obtaining an invitation to dine with him at the Royal Pavilion, which was the pinnacle of social achievement in Brighton[10]—by erecting a statue of him at Royal Crescent. He commissioned a sculptor called Rossi to do the work; he used Coade stone, ceramic stoneware manufactured by Eleanor Coade in London.[10][12][21] The statue was reportedly unable to withstand the weathering effects of sea-spray and strong wind: by 1807, the fingers on the sculpture's left hand had been destroyed, and soon afterwards the whole right arm dropped off.[10][12][18] The statue began to be mistaken for Lord Nelson, and the Prince was reportedly so displeased that he forbade Otto's name to be mentioned in his presence.[10][12] The dilapidated statue—7 feet (2.1 m) tall on a 10-foot (3 m) plinth—was removed in 1819.[10][12][15] The gardens in front of the crescent, in which the statue stood, passed into the ownership of the Brighton Corporation after the 1884 Brighton Improvement Act was passed.[12]

Royal Crescent was listed at Grade II* on 13 October 1952.[22] Such buildings are defined as being "particularly important ... [and] of more than special interest".[23] As of February 2001, it was one of 70 Grade II*-listed buildings and structures, and 1,218 listed buildings of all grades, in the city of Brighton and Hove.[24]

Notable residents of Royal Crescent have included actor Sir John Clements—who lived at number 7—and Sir Laurence Olivier, who lived at number 4 with his third wife Joan Plowright and also owned number 5.[12]

Architecture edit

 
Black glazed mathematical tiles were much used in 18th-century Brighton.

Royal Crescent forms a shallow crescent-shaped of 14 terraced houses on a generally east–west layout behind Marine Parade.[18] Numbers 1 and 14, the houses at each end, stand parallel to that road.[18] Each four-storey house has common stylistic themes. There is a first-floor veranda on every house except number 1, the westernmost house, which has a balcony instead. Each veranda has curved metal roofs (with either cyma recta or cyma reversa mouldings), cast iron railings and bracketed supports.[22]

The whole terrace has a timber-framed façade with brick nogging (infilling) and covered with black glazed mathematical tiles.[11][18] These were laid in an interlocking pattern to mimic brick, and were frequently used in Brighton in the late 18th century.[25] The glazing produced an iridescent effect which reflected sunlight in a visually pleasing way, and also coped better than bricks with sea-spray and other weathering effects.[10][11] The houses were originally built with bow windows, but after critics argued that this spoilt the visual effect of the concave curve of the crescent, they were replaced (except at numbers 12 and 14)[12] by canted bay windows with three sides.[10][11][20][22] A parapet, running above numbers 7–10, has the painted legend royal crescent.[22] When the painter of the lettering, a Mr Leggatt, leant back to check his work, he fell off his ladder and was fatally impaled on the metal railings below.[12]

The entrance porches and doorways to each house are considered particularly impressive.[10][20] The details differ slightly from house to house, but most have open-topped pediments, entablatures, semicircular fanlights and Tuscan-style pilasters.[16][18][22]

Royal Crescent Mansions edit

Standing slightly forward of Royal Crescent immediately to the east, the building now known as Royal Crescent Mansions was originally built as a two-storey house in the early 19th century.[26] Former Foreign Secretary and Prime Minister George Canning once lived there;[12] this is commemorated by a heritage plaque designed by Eric Gill in the 1920s.[27] Extension to five storeys and conversion into a hotel began in 1848,[26] and it opened in its new form in 1857.[18] Some remodelling took place later in the 19th century.[26] The sea-facing façade has a three-window range: from left to right, canted, bowed and canted. Iron balconies span the second, third and fourth floors.[18] The building has nine windows on each floor on its west façade, next to Royal Crescent, and eleven to the east (facing Burlington Street).[26] After many years as a hotel, it was converted to flats.[27]

The building was listed at Grade II on 20 August 1971.[26] As of February 2001, it was one of 1,124 buildings listed at that grade in Brighton and Hove;[24] the status indicates that the building is considered "nationally important and of special interest".[23]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Musgrave 1981, pp. 50–51.
  2. ^ Antram & Morrice 2008, p. 219.
  3. ^ Carder 1990, §40.
  4. ^ Musgrave 1981, pp. 46–47.
  5. ^ Gwynne 1990, p. 98.
  6. ^ Carder 1990, §15.
  7. ^ a b Carder 1990, §71.
  8. ^ Musgrave 1981, p. 53.
  9. ^ a b Berry 2005, p. 99.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Musgrave 1981, p. 125.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Brighton Polytechnic. School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987, p. 65.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Carder 1990, §99.
  13. ^ Berry 2005, p. 120.
  14. ^ Berry 2005, pp. 120–121.
  15. ^ a b Gilbert 1975, p. 95.
  16. ^ a b Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 448.
  17. ^ Antram & Morrice 2008, p. 10.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h Antram & Morrice 2008, p. 133.
  19. ^ Berry 2005, p. 121.
  20. ^ a b c Brighton Polytechnic. School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987, p. 66.
  21. ^ Google Books online. Fashionable Brighton, 1820-1860 by Antony Dale. page 39
  22. ^ a b c d e Historic England (2007). "Nos. 1–14 (Consecutive) and attached railings, Royal Crescent (north side), Brighton (1380838)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  23. ^ a b . English Heritage. 2010. Archived from the original on 26 January 2013. Retrieved 26 August 2011.
  24. ^ a b . Images of England. English Heritage. 2007. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 27 December 2012.
  25. ^ Antram & Morrice 2008, p. 6.
  26. ^ a b c d e Historic England (2007). "Royal Crescent Hotel and attached walls and railings, Marine Parade (north side), Brighton (1381755)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 7 February 2010.
  27. ^ a b . The Regency Society. 29 January 2010. Archived from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 7 February 2010.

Bibliography edit

  • Antram, Nicholas; Morrice, Richard (2008). Brighton and Hove. Pevsner Architectural Guides. London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-12661-7.
  • Berry, Sue (2005). Georgian Brighton. Chichester: Phillimore & Co. ISBN 1-86077-342-7.
  • Brighton Polytechnic. School of Architecture and Interior Design (1987). A Guide to the Buildings of Brighton. Macclesfield: McMillan Martin. ISBN 1-869865-03-0.
  • Carder, Timothy (1990). The Encyclopaedia of Brighton. Lewes: East Sussex County Libraries. ISBN 0-86147-315-9.
  • Gilbert, Edmund M. (1975) [1954]. Brighton: Old Ocean's Bauble. Hassocks: Flare Books. ISBN 0-901759-39-2.
  • Gwynne, Peter (1990). A History of Crawley. Chichester: Phillimore & Company. ISBN 0-85033-718-6.
  • Musgrave, Clifford (1981). Life in Brighton. Rochester: Rochester Press. ISBN 0-571-09285-3.
  • Nairn, Ian; Pevsner, Nikolaus (1965). The Buildings of England: Sussex. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-071028-0.

royal, crescent, brighton, this, article, about, crescent, brighton, other, royal, crescents, england, royal, crescent, bath, royal, crescent, london, royal, crescent, crescent, shaped, terrace, houses, seafront, brighton, part, english, city, brighton, hove, . This article is about the crescent in Brighton For other Royal Crescents in England see Royal Crescent Bath and Royal Crescent London Royal Crescent is a crescent shaped terrace of houses on the seafront in Brighton part of the English city of Brighton and Hove Built in the late 18th and early 19th century as a speculative development on the open cliffs east of Brighton by a wealthy merchant the 14 lodging houses formed the town s eastern boundary until about 1820 It was the seaside resort s first planned architectural composition and the first built intentionally to face the sea The variety of building materials used include black glazed mathematical tiles a characteristic feature of Brighton s 18th century architecture English Heritage has listed the crescent at Grade II for its architectural and historical importance An adjacent five storey building formerly the Royal Crescent Hotel but now converted into flats with the name Royal Crescent Mansions is listed separately at Grade II Royal CrescentThe crescent from the southeastLocationRoyal Crescent Marine Parade Brighton Brighton and Hove East Sussex BN2 1AL EnglandCoordinates50 49 07 N 0 07 31 W 50 8185 N 0 1253 W 50 8185 0 1253Built1798 1807Built forJ B OttoArchitectUnknownArchitectural style s ClassicalListed Building Grade II Official nameNos 1 14 Consecutive Royal Crescent and attached railingsDesignated13 October 1952Reference no 1380838Location of Royal Crescent within central BrightonRoyal Crescent MansionsThe building from the southeastLocationRoyal Crescent Mansions 100 101 Marine Parade Brighton Brighton and Hove East Sussex BN2 1AX EnglandCoordinates50 49 07 N 0 07 31 W 50 8185 N 0 1253 W 50 8185 0 1253BuiltEarly 19th centuryRebuilt1848 1857 as hotel Architectural style s ClassicalListed Building Grade IIOfficial nameRoyal Crescent Hotel and attached walls and railingsDesignated20 August 1971Reference no 1381755 Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 3 Royal Crescent Mansions 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 BibliographyHistory editBrighton s transformation from fishing village to high class fashionable spa town and resort happened in the second half of the 18th century and was prompted by several factors Sea bathing and drinking seawater became an upper class fad encouraged by the publication in 1750 of local doctor Richard Russell s book on the subject 1 The good climate sunny mild and breezy also became widely known when Brighton s first guidebook 2 was published by Anthony Relhan in 1761 3 Road improvements encouraged visitors from London and elsewhere the road from London to Brighton notorious for its poor sometimes impassable condition 4 was turnpiked throughout its length in 1770 5 The arrival of royalty and the effects of their patronage then gave the town such prestige that it became Britain s largest and most important seaside resort 6 The Duke of Cumberland lived in the town from 1779 the Prince of Wales first visited him in 1783 7 although he may also have come in search of Brighton s reputed health benefits 8 and he liked it so much that he came back every year and eventually took up residence at the Royal Pavilion 7 Late 18th century Brighton became popular with speculative developers and builders either professional builders who bought some land started erecting houses themselves or using their own men and tried to sell the remaining land at a profit as construction work continued this was more common or rich speculators from other industries who bought land sometimes from a builder in the circumstances just described and commissioned them to build houses to their specifications 9 J B Otto a merchant who owned plantations in the West Indies was an example of the latter 9 10 In 1798 he bought a wide east west strip of land on the clifftop beyond the eastern edge of the built up area about 0 5 miles 0 8 km east of the Royal Pavilion 11 and hired an architect whose identity is not known and builders to create a crescent of houses which could be let to long term visitors 12 13 Work started in the same year the ends of the crescent were started first 11 The project was then delayed when Otto ran out of money he returned to the West Indies to secure more funds then came back to Brighton and supervised the completion of the crescent which happened in 1807 11 Unlike many contemporary and later developments in Brighton Otto was able to take his time to complete it because he was not wholly dependent on it for his financial success his plantations were still his main source of income 14 The crescent of 14 houses was the first to be built facing the sea and to be designed in harmony with it 12 15 16 17 Brighton s 18th century development had been haphazard and unplanned and Royal Crescent also represented the first unified architectural design planned as a set piece and overseen from start to finish by one man 10 11 12 The grand scale was intended to attract middle and upper class residents both permanent and seasonal 18 and it was immediately successful early tenants included the Rice family a brewing dynasty from London 19 20 In 1802 Otto attempted to impress the Prince of Wales probably with a view to obtaining an invitation to dine with him at the Royal Pavilion which was the pinnacle of social achievement in Brighton 10 by erecting a statue of him at Royal Crescent He commissioned a sculptor called Rossi to do the work he used Coade stone ceramic stoneware manufactured by Eleanor Coade in London 10 12 21 The statue was reportedly unable to withstand the weathering effects of sea spray and strong wind by 1807 the fingers on the sculpture s left hand had been destroyed and soon afterwards the whole right arm dropped off 10 12 18 The statue began to be mistaken for Lord Nelson and the Prince was reportedly so displeased that he forbade Otto s name to be mentioned in his presence 10 12 The dilapidated statue 7 feet 2 1 m tall on a 10 foot 3 m plinth was removed in 1819 10 12 15 The gardens in front of the crescent in which the statue stood passed into the ownership of the Brighton Corporation after the 1884 Brighton Improvement Act was passed 12 Royal Crescent was listed at Grade II on 13 October 1952 22 Such buildings are defined as being particularly important and of more than special interest 23 As of February 2001 it was one of 70 Grade II listed buildings and structures and 1 218 listed buildings of all grades in the city of Brighton and Hove 24 Notable residents of Royal Crescent have included actor Sir John Clements who lived at number 7 and Sir Laurence Olivier who lived at number 4 with his third wife Joan Plowright and also owned number 5 12 Architecture edit nbsp Black glazed mathematical tiles were much used in 18th century Brighton Royal Crescent forms a shallow crescent shaped of 14 terraced houses on a generally east west layout behind Marine Parade 18 Numbers 1 and 14 the houses at each end stand parallel to that road 18 Each four storey house has common stylistic themes There is a first floor veranda on every house except number 1 the westernmost house which has a balcony instead Each veranda has curved metal roofs with either cyma recta or cyma reversa mouldings cast iron railings and bracketed supports 22 The whole terrace has a timber framed facade with brick nogging infilling and covered with black glazed mathematical tiles 11 18 These were laid in an interlocking pattern to mimic brick and were frequently used in Brighton in the late 18th century 25 The glazing produced an iridescent effect which reflected sunlight in a visually pleasing way and also coped better than bricks with sea spray and other weathering effects 10 11 The houses were originally built with bow windows but after critics argued that this spoilt the visual effect of the concave curve of the crescent they were replaced except at numbers 12 and 14 12 by canted bay windows with three sides 10 11 20 22 A parapet running above numbers 7 10 has the painted legend royal crescent 22 When the painter of the lettering a Mr Leggatt leant back to check his work he fell off his ladder and was fatally impaled on the metal railings below 12 The entrance porches and doorways to each house are considered particularly impressive 10 20 The details differ slightly from house to house but most have open topped pediments entablatures semicircular fanlights and Tuscan style pilasters 16 18 22 Royal Crescent Mansions editStanding slightly forward of Royal Crescent immediately to the east the building now known as Royal Crescent Mansions was originally built as a two storey house in the early 19th century 26 Former Foreign Secretary and Prime Minister George Canning once lived there 12 this is commemorated by a heritage plaque designed by Eric Gill in the 1920s 27 Extension to five storeys and conversion into a hotel began in 1848 26 and it opened in its new form in 1857 18 Some remodelling took place later in the 19th century 26 The sea facing facade has a three window range from left to right canted bowed and canted Iron balconies span the second third and fourth floors 18 The building has nine windows on each floor on its west facade next to Royal Crescent and eleven to the east facing Burlington Street 26 After many years as a hotel it was converted to flats 27 The building was listed at Grade II on 20 August 1971 26 As of February 2001 it was one of 1 124 buildings listed at that grade in Brighton and Hove 24 the status indicates that the building is considered nationally important and of special interest 23 See also editGrade II listed buildings in Brighton and Hove Grade II listed buildings in Brighton and Hove P R nbsp Media related to Royal Crescent Brighton at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Media related to Royal Crescent Mansions Brighton at Wikimedia CommonsReferences editNotes edit Musgrave 1981 pp 50 51 Antram amp Morrice 2008 p 219 Carder 1990 40 Musgrave 1981 pp 46 47 Gwynne 1990 p 98 Carder 1990 15 a b Carder 1990 71 Musgrave 1981 p 53 a b Berry 2005 p 99 a b c d e f g h i j Musgrave 1981 p 125 a b c d e f g Brighton Polytechnic School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987 p 65 a b c d e f g h i j k l Carder 1990 99 Berry 2005 p 120 Berry 2005 pp 120 121 a b Gilbert 1975 p 95 a b Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 448 Antram amp Morrice 2008 p 10 a b c d e f g h Antram amp Morrice 2008 p 133 Berry 2005 p 121 a b c Brighton Polytechnic School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987 p 66 Google Books online Fashionable Brighton 1820 1860 by Antony Dale page 39 a b c d e Historic England 2007 Nos 1 14 Consecutive and attached railings Royal Crescent north side Brighton 1380838 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 5 February 2010 a b Listed Buildings English Heritage 2010 Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 26 August 2011 a b Images of England Statistics by County East Sussex Images of England English Heritage 2007 Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 27 December 2012 Antram amp Morrice 2008 p 6 a b c d e Historic England 2007 Royal Crescent Hotel and attached walls and railings Marine Parade north side Brighton 1381755 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 7 February 2010 a b Regency Society Memorial Plaques The Regency Society 29 January 2010 Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 7 February 2010 Bibliography edit Antram Nicholas Morrice Richard 2008 Brighton and Hove Pevsner Architectural Guides London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 12661 7 Berry Sue 2005 Georgian Brighton Chichester Phillimore amp Co ISBN 1 86077 342 7 Brighton Polytechnic School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987 A Guide to the Buildings of Brighton Macclesfield McMillan Martin ISBN 1 869865 03 0 Carder Timothy 1990 The Encyclopaedia of Brighton Lewes East Sussex County Libraries ISBN 0 86147 315 9 Gilbert Edmund M 1975 1954 Brighton Old Ocean s Bauble Hassocks Flare Books ISBN 0 901759 39 2 Gwynne Peter 1990 A History of Crawley Chichester Phillimore amp Company ISBN 0 85033 718 6 Musgrave Clifford 1981 Life in Brighton Rochester Rochester Press ISBN 0 571 09285 3 Nairn Ian Pevsner Nikolaus 1965 The Buildings of England Sussex Harmondsworth Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 071028 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal Crescent Brighton amp oldid 1144896004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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