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The Old Market, Hove

1828 establishments in EnglandBuildings and structures completed in 1828Buildings and structures in Brighton and HoveGrade II listed buildings in East SussexHove
Music venues in East SussexTheatres in England
The Old Market geograph org uk 514602 (Cropped)
The Old Market geograph org uk 514602 (Cropped)

The Old Market, Hove is a historic (grade II listed) building on the border of Brighton and Hove in England. It has served various functions, currently operating as a cultural performance centre under the name "TOM – The Old Market".

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The Old Market, Hove (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The Old Market, Hove
Upper Market Street,

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Wikipedia: The Old Market, HoveContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.8247 ° E -0.1574 °
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Address

The Old Market

Upper Market Street 11A
BN3 1AS , Brunswick
England, United Kingdom
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Phone number

call+441273201801

Website
theoldmarket.com

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linkWikiData (Q7754880)
linkOpenStreetMap (137689034)

The Old Market geograph org uk 514602 (Cropped)
The Old Market geograph org uk 514602 (Cropped)
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Nearby Places

Embassy Court
Embassy Court

Embassy Court is an 11-storey block of luxury flats on the seafront in Brighton, part of the English city of Brighton and Hove. It has been listed at Grade II* by English Heritage. Wells Coates' "extremely controversial" piece of Modernist architecture has "divided opinion across the city" since its completion in 1935, and continues to generate strong feelings among residents, architectural historians and conservationists.The flats were originally let at high rents to wealthy residents, including Max Miller, Rex Harrison and Terence Rattigan, and features such as enclosed balconies and England's first penthouse suites made the 72-apartment, 11-storey building "one of the most desirable and sought-after addresses in Brighton and Hove". Its fortunes changed dramatically from the 1970s, though, as a succession of complex court cases set leaseholders, freeholders and landlords against each other while the building rotted. By the start of the 21st century it was an "embarrassing eyesore" which was close to being demolished, despite its listed status. Proposals to refurbish the block came to nothing until the court cases concluded in 2004 and Sir Terence Conran's architectural practice was brought in. With an investment of £5 million, raised entirely by the residents, Embassy Court was overhauled: by 2006 it had been restored to its original status as a high-class residence, in contrast to its poor late-20th-century reputation.