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The Blind Tiger Club, Brighton

2014 disestablishments in EnglandFormer music venues in EnglandMusic in Brighton and HoveMusic venue stubsMusic venues completed in 2010
Brewdog, Grand Parade, Brighton (geograph 4691105)
Brewdog, Grand Parade, Brighton (geograph 4691105)

The Blind Tiger Club was a mixed music, arts and community venue in Brighton, England, which opened in 2010. The venue closed in 2014, and Time Out described the venue as "semi-legendary", in its round-up of Brighton's live music scene that year. In 2015, Gigwise included the club in their list of the UK's Greatest Lost Venues.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The Blind Tiger Club, Brighton (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The Blind Tiger Club, Brighton
Grand Parade, Brighton Round Hill

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Wikipedia: The Blind Tiger Club, BrightonContinue reading on Wikipedia

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N 50.824548 ° E -0.135485 °
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Brewdog

Grand Parade 52-54
BN2 9QA Brighton, Round Hill
England, United Kingdom
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Website
brewdog.com

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Brewdog, Grand Parade, Brighton (geograph 4691105)
Brewdog, Grand Parade, Brighton (geograph 4691105)
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Nearby Places

Jubilee Library, Brighton
Jubilee Library, Brighton

Jubilee Library is the largest public library serving the English city of Brighton and Hove. The Jubilee Library forms the centrepiece of the Jubilee Square development in central Brighton, a £50 million scheme to regenerate a 40-year-old brownfield site. Opened in 2005 by the Princess Royal and subsequently visited by Queen Elizabeth II, the library has won numerous architectural design awards and has been described as "a triumph", "the most important public building constructed in Brighton since the Royal Pavilion" and "the superhero [that] saved the city". In terms of visitor numbers and loans, the library is one of the busiest in England. Before 2005, the seaside resort of Brighton did not have a purpose-built central library, but there had been attempts to create one for more than a century. After several proposals in the postwar period came to nothing—including elaborate schemes which would have combined a library with ice rinks, exhibition halls, car parks and other developments—funding was secured in the late 1990s through the newly introduced Private finance initiative. A suitable derelict site already existed in the centre of Brighton, and a competitive tender process identified finance providers, architects and building contractors. The new library, the first part of the Jubilee Square scheme to be finished, was ready on time and on budget in 2005, and superseded a temporary library which had replaced the 100-year-old facilities in 1999. The new library brings together facilities previously housed in separate sites, and offers extensive IT facilities, a large LGBT literature collection and various social and community activities. Several pieces of art were commissioned for the building and its environs. The building has been described as one of the most energy-efficient structures in England—its carbon footprint is half that of a traditional public building of comparable size, and natural energy is used throughout.