Brighton City Guide

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Brighton Dome

Welcome to the south coast's premier multi-arts venue at the cultural heart of England's ‘city on the edge’.
With a rich history spanning over 200 years (starting life as the Prince Regent's stables and riding house), Brighton Dome provides an extraordinary space in which to bring the arts alive.
Each year, we present and produce over 600 events spanning music, theatre, dance, comedy, literature, spoken word, visual arts, film, digital and more. In addition to the year-round programme, each May we produce England's leading and most-progressive mixed-arts celebration, the internationally-acclaimed Brighton Festival.
A hub for artists across the region, Brighton Dome commissions and supports both emerging and established artists and companies, enabling them to develop, take risks and deliver work of the highest quality. Read about our Associate Artists and programming partners.
Brighton Dome is committed to bringing all sorts of art to all sorts of people. By offering imaginative new ways to discover and participate - from Saturday morning singing to theatrical make-up workshops - we aim to inspire creativity in people of all ages with experiences to remember.
There's fresh air blowing through the doors of Brighton Dome. Why not follow it in?
Brighton Dome is supported by Brighton & Hove City Council and Arts Council England. Brighton Dome & Festival Ltd is a registered charity number 249748.
With a rich history spanning over 200 years (starting life as the Prince Regent's stables and riding house), Brighton Dome provides an extraordinary space in which to bring the arts alive.
Each year, we present and produce over 600 events spanning music, theatre, dance, comedy, literature, spoken word, visual arts, film, digital and more. In addition to the year-round programme, each May we produce England's leading and most-progressive mixed-arts celebration, the internationally-acclaimed Brighton Festival.
A hub for artists across the region, Brighton Dome commissions and supports both emerging and established artists and companies, enabling them to develop, take risks and deliver work of the highest quality. Read about our Associate Artists and programming partners.
Brighton Dome is committed to bringing all sorts of art to all sorts of people. By offering imaginative new ways to discover and participate - from Saturday morning singing to theatrical make-up workshops - we aim to inspire creativity in people of all ages with experiences to remember.
There's fresh air blowing through the doors of Brighton Dome. Why not follow it in?
Brighton Dome is supported by Brighton & Hove City Council and Arts Council England. Brighton Dome & Festival Ltd is a registered charity number 249748.
The Regency Restaurant

The address rings a bit of a bell... and so it should. As every self respecting amateur social historian with a special interest in the high society of early 19th Century England knows, 131 Kings Road, Brighton was the palatial seafront home of Harriott Mellon, at the time the richest woman in Europe, widow of banker Thomas Coutts and wife of the ninth Duke of St Albans.
It became a restaurant in the early 1930's and it remains one of the oldest and most popular seafront restaurants in Brighton, where you can experience the tempting flavours of the locally caught fresh fish whilst enjoying spectacular views of the sea and West Pier. Eugenius Birch built the magnificent and unique English seaside pleasure pier, over 130 years ago. Although closed since 1975 and suffering decay, miraculously the West Pier still survives, fundamentally unchanged since 1916, as a magical and enduring part of British architectural history and a key feature of the Brighton seafront.
It became a restaurant in the early 1930's and it remains one of the oldest and most popular seafront restaurants in Brighton, where you can experience the tempting flavours of the locally caught fresh fish whilst enjoying spectacular views of the sea and West Pier. Eugenius Birch built the magnificent and unique English seaside pleasure pier, over 130 years ago. Although closed since 1975 and suffering decay, miraculously the West Pier still survives, fundamentally unchanged since 1916, as a magical and enduring part of British architectural history and a key feature of the Brighton seafront.