Sussex Style - August 2013

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SUSSEXSTYLE www.sussexstyle.co.uk

GRAND DESIGN

AUGUST 2013

Hickstead Ladies Day

The house Joe Harmston built

THE GREENS Daniel Raven sees red TAKING SIDES:

SOUTH COAST SECRET ALL CHANGE

What the Frack?

Eastbourne

COUNTRY KITCHENS

What to wear now

What the Beauty Experts don’t tell you


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SUSSEX STYLE

WELCOME TO THE AUGUST ISSUE OF

SUSSEXSTYLE

Mid-season times… It is one of those mid-season times when you are not quite sure whether to be celebrating summer or thinking ahead for autumn. Apparently a friend of a friend on Facebook is already counting down the shopping days to Christmas. Why? Anyway we have hedged our bets with features on entertaining and making yourself comfortable in the garden alongside fashion stylist Michael Temprano’s tips for dressing across the seasons, while Sam Bilton is eating al fresco and has a round-up of fab foodie festivals that seem to proliferate at harvest time. One of the joys of editing Sussex Style magazine is the outstanding features from our contributors. It has always been our intention to create a magazine that’s an intelligent, interesting, informed read and we have some absolutely cracking contributors on board. Each month it is an absolute treat to open up the features as they wing into my inbox. For example there is award-winning writer and photographer Norman Miller who writes for national titles such as The Sunday Times, Sunday Telegraph, The Guardian, Daily Mail and more… and Sussex Style! Lucky for us – dip into his lively guide to Edinburgh beyond the Festival, and I love his ‘coach park or art gallery’piece on Hastings’ Jerwood. Sofie Allsopp (sister of Kirstie) always delivers a great take on interiors, and we’ve a newbie on board, Laura Jandac, otherwise known as The Fabric Lady, who is writing about upcycling and skip-diving made easy. This

is usually Kirstie Allsopp’s thing, but Laura is suggesting achieveing the look by sourcing high street and internet alternatives for those of us who don’t have the time, vision or inclination to do it ourselves. (That’s me then.) Meanwhile Daniel Raven is always refreshingly controversial, and Caroline Langrishe’s interviews always deliver an insider’s view on the world of the luvvies – her feature on theatre director Joe Harmston’s own Sussex grand design is inspirational. Do you dream of building your own home? I really do hope you enjoy reading Sussex Style, and please let me know if there are any topics you would like us to feature in the magazine. We really hope to deliver a well-written, opinionated, occasionally irreverent publication (and it’s FREE), Emma Piper Emma.Piper@sandrpublishing.co.uk

www.sussexstyle.co.uk

August 2013

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BE IN THE PERFECT POSITION...

South Downs: 18 mins by car

Brighton: 29 minutes by car,14 minutes by train

London: 43 minutes by train

CHOOSE FROM FOUR STUNNING DEVELOPMENTS IN HAYWARDS HEATH Enjoy a new Crest Nicholson home in popular Haywards Heath – a rural retreat located close to the South Downs National Park, yet with excellent connections to Central London, Gatwick Airport and Brighton. This historic town offers the very best of town and country living and at Crest Nicholson we have a portfolio of properties to suit all needs, from stylish apartments to 5 bedroom family homes.

Haywards Heath | RH16 4EX

Styled on a traditional English country village and enjoying stunning views over the South Downs, St Francis Park is just a short stroll from Haywards Heath’s wealth of shops, pubs and restaurants. 4 bedroom family homes Prices from £439,950

Help to Buy and Part Exchange available.* To find out more call or visit one of our developments today. To find out more email stfrancispark@crestnicholson.com or call 0870 751 3966

www.crestnicholson.com *Terms and conditions apply. Speak to the Sales Advisor for full details. Photography taken at respective developments. Digital illustration is indicative only. Travel times are approximate. Prices correct at time of going to press.


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Following the success of St Francis Park, Woodside will offer a new collection of 2, 3 & 4 bedroom homes.

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3 & 4 bedroom houses Prices from £279,950

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Prices from ÂŁ389,950 Crosshaven townhouses are ready to move into, meaning that purchasers can look forward to starting the autumn in their new home. Each is highly specified, with fully-fitted designer kitchens incorporating numerous integrated appliances including a double oven, dishwasher and washing machine. Bathrooms feature contemporary suites from Roca and thermostatic Hansgrohe showers. They have also been designed to be highly energy-efficient to help keep fuel bills low. Lewes is an important and well placed transport hub, its main line railway station provides fast links to Brighton, London and Gatwick Airport. Steeped in heritage, Lewes also enjoys numerous important historical landmarks, a wealth of cultural activities as well as being on the doorstep of the South Downs National Park. Crosshaven genuinely boasts the benefit of having the very best qualities of both town and country living.

For more information and to view the homes, please contact Clifford Dann on 01273 477022 or visit www.rydonhomes.co.uk.

Call 01273 477022

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Saltdean, Brighton BN2 8BU

Through the KEYHOLE at GRAND OCEAN Luxury art deco development recognised as one of Brighton’s most famous buildings


site was blessed with beautiful gardens, a magnificent ballroom and roof sundecks that attracted the “in-crowd” for a weekend by the sea. Today the apartments have a similar appeal with many being sold as weekend and holiday bolt holes for those yearning for that unique combination of the cleansing sea air and the vibrancy of a Brighton weekend.

Grand Ocean, the restored art deco landmark now converted to luxury apartments, has joined an illustrious list as one of the most famous buildings in Brighton. The development, formerly the Grand Hotel overlooking the sea at Saltdean, has been chosen as the starting point of a new tour which takes visitors on an architectural journey of the city. Grand Ocean is indeed in fine company as the tour takes in the Georgian splendour of Kemp Town, the world renowned Pavilion, the famous pier and the Grand Hotel. Ever since the Prince Regent built his extravagant Pavilion, Brighton has been proud to be seen as out of the ordinary, as offering visitors and residents something special. Today, the transformation of Grand Ocean from the iconic art deco hotel into a collection of stunning luxury apartments is continuing the city’s association with the architecturally exceptional. For much of its history the Grand Ocean site has been a landmark destination. Built as one of the most spectacular hotels on the South Coast, the

Today Grand Ocean is simply one of the finest coastal developments in the UK. The development offers a range of luxury one and two bedroom apartments along with a very few penthouse apartments which, with their huge wrap-around terraces and 29ft long living rooms offering wonderful sea views, simply take the breath away.

attractions, night life and arts scene. A short taxi ride allows you to sample the myriad restaurants, bars and quirky eateries and to finish the evening with a walk along the sea front. The Pavilion Theatre and the Brighton Centre offer a year round choice of big names and fringe artists and the Lanes offer endless hours of rummaging in antique shops, visiting galleries or enjoying a cappuccino and watching the world go by. For those whose love of the sea extends to more than simply enjoying the spectacular views, Grand Ocean is just five minutes from Brighton Marina and its 1600 berths.

Internally, the apartments find the perfect balance of contemporary style that pays tribute to heritage but delivers the very best of modern convenience with the latest kitchens and bathroom designs and oak finishes to all internal doors.

Prices for an apartment at Grand Ocean often surprise, being just outside the City Centre you get that much more for your money. 2 bedroom apartment prices begin at just £249,995 whilst the breathtaking penthouse is on the market at £479,995. Further details can be found at www.exploreliving.co.uk or by calling 0845 873 9054.

Grand Ocean is situated within minutes of the City Centre and its famous architecture,

Further details of the architectural tour of Brighton can be found at www.visitbrighton.com

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A development by: 1 bed apartment at £224,995 2 bed apartments from £249,995 to £479,995 For more information please call Explore Living on

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email southeast@exploreliving.co.uk or visit www.exploreliving.co.uk Prices correct at time of print.


stylecontents

22 86 Opinion 14 What the Frack? 90 Daniel Raven Sees Red

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People 18 The House that Joe Built

Places 38 Focus: East Grinstead 44 South Coast Secret: Eastbourne

Shopping 42 Local Heroes

Event 22 Longines Royal International Horse Show

Fashion & Beauty 26 28 30 50 52 54

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In Love With… Transeasonal Classics Hello Autumn The Beauty Queen Spa Style: Utopia What the Experts Don’t Tell You

August 2013

www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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OAK FRAMED BUILDINGS

HARDWOOD DECKING

OAK & WALNUT FLOORING

HOME & GARDEN FEATURES

www.roundwood.com Tel: 01435 867 072 Round Wood | Newick Lane | Mayfield | East Sussex | TN20 6RG


Summerhill House, Hythe Road, Kent TN24 0NE

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T: 01273 358 850 www.sussexstyle.co.uk

Editor Emma Piper Publishing Director Seán Kane Style Director Michael Temprano Motoring Annie Oulton Contributors Sofie Allsopp, Sam Bilton, Laura Jandac, Caroline Langrishe, Norman Miller, Daniel Raven Advertising Manager Linda Warburton Advertising Rosemary Brady, Paul Carter Finance Director Richard Judd

Travel

Creative Director Karen Holloway

48 Edinburgh – Beyond the Festival

Published by S and R Publishing Ltd

Homes & Gardens 56 Garden Party With Sofie Allsopp 60 Iconic Sussex 66 Country Kitchens 70 Wet Wet Wet 72 Garden Rooms 74 The Fabric Lady Goes Skip Diving

F: Sussex Style Magazine

www.facebook.com/SussexStyleMagazine

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T: SussexStyleMag www.twitter.com/SussexStyleMag

Sussex Style™

Copyright 2013-06-13

ISSN 2049-6044

Motoring

interiorstyle

stylecontents

SUSSEXSTYLE

86 It’s All About the Journey

SUSSEXSTYLE

HEAD HEAD

www.sussexstyle.co.uk

AUGUST 2013

INTRO

GRaNd dEsiGN

HicksTEad Ladies day

The house Joe Harmston built

THE GREENS daniel Raven sees red

Food & Drink 82 Scoff & Stuff 84 Lunch at East Chitlington 85 The Secret Diner Visits Cote

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August 2013

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Gadgets & Gizmos 88 Coffee Break

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TAKING SIDES:

What the Frack? SOUTH COAST SECRET aLL cHaNGE

Eastbourne

COUNTRY KITCHENS 92

August 2013

SS_AUGUST-COVERS.indd SS_AUGUST-2013.indd 92 1

What to wear now

What the Beauty Experts don’t tell you

www.sussexstyle.co.uk

09/08/2013 15:32

09/08/2013 16:46

Cover: Photography: Emma Jane Lee Photography Model: Lauren Gosbee, Hat www.fenwicks.co.uk Dress : Folly Maxi from Topshop www.topshop.co.uk

All rights reserved.Except for normal review purposes, no part of this magazine may be reproduced without the written permission of the publishers. No artwork or editorial content may be used in other form or publication without the publishers consent. Every care is taken in the preparation of this magazine, but the contents are only meant as a guide to readers. The proprietors of this publication our publishers, not agents or sub agents of those who advertise therein. They cannot be held liable for any loss suffered as a result of information gained from the publication. Copyright 2013 S and R Publishing Ltd - Sussex Style ™.


38 Keymer Road Hassocks West Sussex BN6 8AP Tel 01273 841228 Reigate 01737 226450

Tunbridge Wells 01892 617462


opinionstyle

This is going to spark the biggest environmental movement we have seen

WHAT THE FRACK? Could our addiction to fossil fuels cost the earth? Emma Piper is certainly not happy about Sussex paying the price

T

he battle of Balcombe continues and an emerging fight over Fernhurst is gaining momentum. What am I talking about? The fractious issue of ‘fracking’, of course. The protests at Balcombe have brought together some strange bedfellows, crossing age and class and encompassing the world of celebrity and business with well-to-do locals, cool celebs (Marina Hynde, daughter of The Kinks’ Ray Davies and Pretenders’ Chrissie Hynde, has been arrested for obstruction), environmental organisations such as Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth and the more militant protester (think Swampy). Even Lush the cosmetics company have been getting in on the act. Good for them! If retail-owners are looking to rebrand the high street (see my opinion piece

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Sussex Style June 2013) this could be a big, bold way forward – supporting local communities in protests, using their shopfronts and websites to galvanise action. So what’s it all about? Hydraulic fracturing or fracking is a technique to extract shale gas from the earth by blasting a mix of sand, water and chemicals into the rock at high pressure. Those in favour are playing down fracking’s threats to the environment, which include contaminating water, polluting air, ruining the countryside and even triggering earthquakes; the first test well in the UK, near Blackpool, appeared to have caused two earthquakes. The organisation Frack-off describes these methods as extreme energy, explaining that to produce one frack for

shale gas, chemicals are pumped into two to eight million gallons of water which is then blasted deep into the ground to force out the gas. A larger frack would use eight million gallons of water - all this water poisoned for just one frack. There is talk of methane contamination of nearby and ground water, and radioactive isotopes leaking out of the rocks that the fracking fluid passes through. Fracking also leaks ozone and a variety of volatile chemicals during the process, and a significant increase in respiratory diseases has been reported in the area close to the first fracking site in the UK. For me it’s a no-brainer, I’m on the side of the protesters. Maybe I’m just a simple soul, but fracking seems to me to ‘drill down’ (sorry for pun) to a


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opinionstyle

Photo: Demotix/PA Images

very straightforward equation between sustaining a comfortable lifestyle in the short term (apparently the UK has enough shale oil deposits to fuel the country for 40 years; am I alone in thinking that’s not very long?) or risking contaminating our water supply (and food chain) perhaps indefinitely. If we run out of oil we’re inconvenienced. Okay, we are really heavily inconvenienced, but we will adapt. If we run out of clean drinking water we die. And if fracking can happen in pretty, leafy conservative (with a small ‘c’ if not a large ‘C’) West Sussex it can happen anywhere. Perhaps West Sussex was picked because there was an assumption that the local, loyal Tories wouldn’t complain. But check out www.frackoff.org.uk – the number of proposed sites is extensive. Fracking! Coming soon to a town or village near you. Did anyone else crack up with sardonic laughter at former government energy adviser Lord Howell (aka George Osborne’s father-in-law) when, perhaps regretting the choice of Sussex, he suggested fracking could take place in ‘desolate’ north east England without any impact on the surrounding environment? He then went on to add insult to injury in an attempt to clarify his comments by suggesting he was referring to ‘unloved’ areas of the country such as Lancashire. A brief digression: Lancashire is north west, not north east. And not only do Lancastrians love their county, but many non-Lancastrians love their county, too. It shocks me that someone with responsibilities for our country should have such contempt for its residents and be so ignorant of its geography. Lancashire’s coastline includes sweeping bays and the picturesque Forest of Bowland. Equally the ‘desolate’ north east has absolutely stunning landscapes, too (or has he just damned the North York Moors and Robin Hood’s Bay?). But back to delightful Sussex. What the frack is going on? Are politicians blinded by business? Have they forgotten the constituents they are meant to represent?

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Kathy Dunne, of resident’s campaign group No Fracking in Balcombe Society, conducted a survey in the village: 85 per cent of those who answered were against fracking, nine per cent were undecided and only six per cent supported fracking. “We spoke to every household in the village,” said Kathy, “and the overwhelming majority of people who live in Balcombe don’t want fracking.” Brenda Pollack, Friends of Earth’s south east regional campaigner warned: “People are right to be concerned about fracking. It threatens their environment and quality of life and will mean more climate-changing emissions are pumped into the atmosphere. And there’s plenty of evidence that it won’t lead to cheaper fuel bills.” Even deputy prime minister Nick Clegg on his regular LBC radio phone-in said that the Conservatives were getting “over-excited” about the controversial extraction technique’s potential benefits. While a cross-party group of experts chaired by former energy minister Charles Hendry released a nine-month inquiry report which stated that any boom in shale gas production would be ‘unlikely to give the UK cheap gas’. Bianca Jagger, a committed environmentalist and founder of Bianca Jagger Human Rights Foundation has visited Balcombe. “I love this country and would be devastated to witness the industrialisation of our countryside.” There is plenty of disturbing scientific evidence available about fracking

contaminating local water supplies, including reports by Professor Tony Ingraffea, professor of engineering at Cornell University and president of Physicians, Scientists and Engineers for Healthy Energy, who suggests that fracking can cause methane leaks leading to the contamination of groundwater and aquifers. In another study methane (a greenhouse gas 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide) was found to be 17 times higher in drinking-water wells near fracturing sites than normal wells. Water equals life. It is the most precious commodity we have on earth. As for south east England – we regularly suffer from water shortages. It seems to me an incomprehensible madness that we should knowingly pollute our water supplies on such a scale. As protests continue in Balcombe, attention now turns to Fernhurst. This time round it is Celtique Energie behind the application to drill. The Midhurst & Petworth Observer reports that letters of protest have poured into South Downs National Park Authority and the Frack Free Fernhurst campaigners are gathering support with concerns about air, light and ground water pollution, noise and huge lorries using narrow country lanes. Residents have expressed concern about drilling within the National Park, an area of outstanding natural beauty, pointing out that it would be unlikely they would be granted planning permission to build homes in the Park so why should drilling be allowed. Vanessa Vine, of Frack Free Sussex,was quoted in The Independent saying about Cuadrilla drilling at Balcombe: “This is a violation of our geology that could threaten our water, fresh air and our children… This is going to spark the biggest environmental movement we have seen.” We have no right to leave a legacy of polluted water to the next generation. Let’s invest in alternative energy sources, not fracking.

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SUSSEX STYLE

Francis Egan, chief executive for Cuadrilla, currently drilling at Lower Stumble (the site just outside Balcombe) reacted to concerns by insisting that the practice of fracking was safe and that the drilling taking place at Lower Stumble outside Balcombe was for oil exploration and that the company would not be fracturing the well as part of this process. However most locals are concerned the company will end up concluding that it will need to deploy this technique and secure the necessary permits.


lifetyle

THE HOUSE THAT JOE BUILT Director Joe Harmston’s very own Grand Design – visited by Sussex Style’s thesp, Caroline Langrishe

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SUSSEX STYLE

The first priority, unusually, was to create a gorgeous, organic garden for the house to grow out of

O

n a hot summer’s day in August six years ago, I started rehearsals for a theatre production of Private Lives, directed by the talented Joe Harmston. We had a limited time in which to put on this play but Joe struck me as a very committed and energised man and as we struggled to make the schedule work, he casually dropped into the mix that he had just moved into a small semi-detached cottage in West Sussex near Arundel that came with a couple of acres of land on which he was going to build a house. I wasn’t sure I had heard right, at that point there was a lot of discussion about the set for the play, which seemed complex enough, but a whole house… in the REAL world? A couple of years later, I was working with him again on another play and I remember his beautiful wife Polly (an ecclesiastical textile designer) coming to see the show carrying rolls and rolls of architectural plans for the house which she excitedly laid out in my dressing room for us all to gawp over. So it was true, Joe was not only creating productions for the stage, he was producing and building a mammoth production to live in.

Prior to the foundations being laid, Joe, Polly and an army of friends, neighbours and labourers spent months clearing the land of impenetrably thick brambles, a derelict barn with trees growing through it and two 60-foot greenhouses. The first priority, unusually, was to create a gorgeous, organic garden for the house to grow out of rather than build a modern house surrounded by rubble and wasteland which would then have to be landscaped. Lack of funds and living on site in the little cottage gave them plenty of time to work on ideas and, while experiencing all weathers and seasons, they created a plan for each room to have a garden view and to plant traditional Sussex varieties of mixed hedgerows and trees to suit the environment.

Handyman about the Holocaust. We were touring through a freezing and wet autumn and Joe would appear periodically in various theatres to keep an eye on the show and give us our notes. He was always exhausted and keen to get back to digging trenches for plumbing pipes. For alongside directing plays full time for the theatre, he was building his house. A huge one at that and a lifelong dream for Joe and Polly brought to reality with the help of Polly’s father, an architect who had helped draw up the plans.

Lawns were laid and tiered on top of mountains of earth dug up for the foundations. Joe describes the laying of the foundations as watching thousands of pounds of money transformed into liquid concrete being poured into a giant hole in the ground.

Joe remembers sitting in bed with Polly 17 years ago planning the house they would build one day. It was a romantic notion by anyone’s standards; or, as Joe would say, ”Insane!”. Neither of them is afraid of hard, physical work, and Polly, despite working in textiles and being hugely artistic, is apparently a dab hand at reversing a Landrover and trailer full of concrete, bricks and rubble… While Joe has always been an enthusiastic carpenter and has studied design and technology. They are both strong, and determined from the outset to work alongside builders and bricklayers, electricians and plumbers.

As recently as last year I was working for the third time with Joe on a rather intense and disturbing play The

He says over the last few years he has literally dug himself into the ground, even suffering a hernia in the process. www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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lifetyle

Joe directing The Prodigals

Joe standing on the roof before it was covered in slate

Joe digging the foundations for the steel pillars by hand

Elyot and Beatrice were four and six when building work started in 2008

One of the priorities was to involve their neighbours and workers in the process. In doing so they have gained huge support and enthusiasm and made genuine friendships. There’s an impression that for all involved it has triggered similar emotions to those following a pregnancy, albeit a sevenyear one! This August, the day before Joe started rehearsals for a new musical he is directing, The Prodigals, I visited Joe at his nearly finished new house. We sat under an apple tree looking up at the magnificent new house, soon to be home. It is exactly what he and Polly had in mind. A large, welcoming space that’s totally energy effective and enjoys uninterrupted views. Years of planning, waiting, saving and hard work have resulted in their dream home. A house, as Joe describes it, for sharing and partying in, a house that their two children have grown up with and will enjoy as a true family home.

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The first stage foundations going in



eventstyle

longines royal international

horse show It was showtime at Hickstead with the world’s best riders and horses competing – Sussex Style were there

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SUSSEX STYLE

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he world’s best horses and riders flocked to Hickstead in West Sussex earlier this month for the Longines Royal International Horse Show. One of the oldest and most prestigious equestrian events in the world, having reached its 106th birthday this year, it is the official show of the British Horse Society and its patron is Her Majesty The Queen. Following two thrilling days of national showjumping competition, the international action got underway on Thursday 1 August with the Amlin Plus Eventing Grand Prix. This unique event sees showjumpers and eventers go head to head over a course of coloured jumps and fixed cross-country fences. A number of top riders lined up for this year’s class, including former World and Olympic champion Mark Todd, Rolex Grand Slam winner Pippa Funnell and London 2012 silver medallist Tina Cook, but it was 22-year-old showjumper Zoe Adams who took the title, winning on Satonamillion. “The last couple of years I’ve been close and I love this class, it’s such an adrenalin rush - the more times you do it, the hungrier you get to win it,” said Zoe. “This is his most prestigious win to date, and it’s always good to win in the International Arena at Hickstead.”

Friday saw the German team win the British leg of the Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup of Great Britain, finishing on a total team score of just four faults after two rounds of jumping. The top class squad made easy work of the huge, technical course, while Great Britain had to settle for fifth place.

lady rider, Laura Renwick. She raced to victory in the Sky Sports Speed Classic.

The Furusiyya Rider of the Day award was given to Irish rider Shane Breen, who is based at Hickstead. Shane rode Cos I Can to score two immaculate clear rounds, helping Ireland come fourth overall. The Furusiyya Rider of the Day award is presented to the horse and rider combination that is judged to have best displayed qualities such as harmony, partnership, balance and skill throughout their two rounds.

The following day saw the showjumping reach a superb conclusion with the Longines King George V Gold Cup, one of the most valuable Grands Prix in showjumping. This year, much to the delight of the home crowd, Ben Maher won this coveted prize, exactly one year to the day that he began his London 2012 gold medal campaign at Greenwich. “There are a few big classes that every showjumper wants to win and the Hickstead Derby [which Ben won in 2005] and the King’s Cup are two of them - I’ve come close to winning this a couple of times so it feels great to have finally done it,” said Ben.

Shane produced an equally immaculate performance to claim Saturday’s feature class, the Templant Events Queen Elizabeth II Cup, on Zarnita. “She only started jumping when she was six, so she’s relatively inexperienced, but she’s got loads of scope and is very careful. She’s a peculiar kind of mare as she jumps better the bigger the course, so don’t be surprised if you see her in a Nations Cup or Grand Prix next year,” added Shane. Aptly, as Saturday was Ladies’ Day at Hickstead, the other main class of the day was won by Britain’s top

Throughout the week, show horses and ponies of every size and type contested their class championships, with the elite winners going through to the final judging of The British Horse Society Supreme Horse and Underwood Supreme Pony Championships. Both finals went down to thrilling ‘ride offs’ between the top two equines, with hack champion Pearly King and Simon Charlesworth taking the Supreme horse title, while Dance All Night and Sami Elliott won the pony section title for the second year in a row. www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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eventstyle

Ladies Day Photographer – Emma Jane Lee Photography Hickstead: Lottie Simons Photography

Ladies’ Day The Saturday of the show formed the fifth annual Ladies’ Day at Hickstead, which supported Variety, the children’s charity, and was run in conjunction with official media partner Sussex Style magazine. Celebrity judge Christopher Biggins formed the deciding vote in the best dressed lady competition, choosing Lisha Leeman as ‘Best Dressed Filly’. Lisha wore an eye-catching violet floral Karen Millen dress, although it was her homemade black and violet hat that clinched the decision for Christopher Biggins. Lisha said: “I’m a great fan of Karen Millen, she never lets me down, but I couldn’t find a hat, so I thought I’d make one, and it took me two days.” Lisha was rewarded with a pampering two-day stay at the luxury Alexander House Hotel & Utopia Spa with dinner, afternoon tea and spa treatments, plus a magnum of Champagne Moutard. The first runner-up was Jean Sibson, who is recovering after her second heart attack. The prize was especially important to Jean, who had lost some of her confidence since being unwell and was thrilled to be picked as one of the finalists. She won a luxurious overnight stay at Ockenden Manor Hotel & Spa, with dinner for two and spa treatments. Second runner-up Sophie Elliott won a dining extravaganza: the eight-course Pass Experience at Michelin-starred Pass Restaurant at South Lodge Hotel. This year, there was a ‘Most Stylish Stallion’ award which went to Richard Leeman, Lisha’s husband. He was presented with a bottle of champagne, while all ten Ladies’ Day finalists received a stunning bouquet from florists Kiki and Cole.

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SUSSEX STYLE

www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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personalstyle

Parrot necklace and Parrot earrings from £19, Hobbs, House of Fraser, Chichester; Hobbs, Brighton, Tunbridge Wells www.hobbs.co.uk

Chloé Eau de Parfum from £39.50 for 30ml, John Lewis www.johnlewis.com

Best of British wool scarf £45, Best of British, M&S, Brighton, Chichester, Shoreham www.marksandspencer.com

IN LOVE WITH

Autograph coat in pastel blue £129, M&S, Brighton, Chichester, Shoreham www.marksandspencer.com

Editor’s favourite finds this month Scarf £20, Matthew Williamson, House of Fraser, Chichester www.houseoffraser.co.uk

Blue suede Chelsea ankle boot, Petter £115, Bertie, Dune, House of Fraser, Chichester; Debenhams, Brighton www.dune.co.uk

Wakefield satchel £149, Hobbs, House of Fraser, Chichester; Hobbs, Brighton, Tunbridge Wells www.hobbs.co.uk

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Are you ready for the

Seasonal change? Boutique Lingerie, Nightwear and Swimwear Fitting service for Bra’s and Swimwear from 28-44 (band size) and A-J (cup size). Lily & Grace Lingerie

The Studio • Lower Road • Forest Row • East Sussex • RH18 5ES • 01342 822122


menstyle

TRANSEASONAL MODERN SHARP WORKWEAR

Suit £895, Shirt, £125, Shoes, £310, CH Carolina Herrera, Tel 0203 441 0965

Jacket £299, AR RED Nick Hart, Austin Reed, Gatwick www.austinreed.co.uk

Shirt £22, Burton, Brighton, Eastbourne, Worthing www.burton.co.uk

Glasses £159.50, Hugo Boss, Eyesite, Brighton www.eyesite.co.uk

Eau de Parfum £67 for 100ml, Potion – Royal Black, DSQUARED2, Harvey Nichols www.harveynichols.com

Trousers £130, AR RED Nick Hart, Austin Reed, Gatwick www.austinreed.co.uk

Pocket Square £14, Jeff Banks, Debenhams, Brighton, Crawley, Eastbourne, Worthing www.debenhams.com

Jacket £749, Vivienne Westwood, Profile Fashion, Brighton www.profilefashion.com

Tie £15, River Island, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.riverisland.com

Trench coat £299, Best of British, M&S, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.marksandspencer.com

Polo shirt £235, Gucci, Profile Fashion, Brighton www.profilefashion.com

Shoes £135, Loake for Jasper Conran, Debenhams, Brighton, Crawley, Eastbourne, Worthing www.debenhams.com

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Bag £820, Gucci, Profile Fashion, Brighton www.profilefashion.com


CLASSIC BASICS OFF DUTY COOL

SUSSEX STYLE

Waistcoat £365, Shirt £145, Knitwear £165, Trousers £145, Shoes, Price on request, Scarf £135, Gloves £130, CH Carolina Herrera, Tel 0203 441 0965

Parka £65, Shore Leave, Urban Outfitters, Brighton www.urbanoutfitters.co.uk

Jacket £569, Lanvin, Profile Fashion, Brighton www.profilefashion.com

Hoody £34.99, Penguin, Get The Label, www.getthelabel.com

Jumper £29.95, Lands’ End, www.landsend.co.uk

Jeans £50, River Island, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.riverisland.com

Shirt £289, Dolce & Gabbana, Profile Fashion, Brighton www.profilefashion.com

Polo shirt £65, Jaeger, Brighton, Chichester www.jaeger.co.uk Trainers £370, Gucci, Profile Fashion, Brighton www.profilefashion.com

Chinos £35, Next, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.next.co.uk Shirt £39.95, Lands’ End, www.landsend.co.uk

Cardigan £30, Burton, Brighton, Eastbourne, Worthing www.burton.co.uk

Boots £69, Hush Puppies, Badger Clothing, Brighton www.badgerclothing.co.uk www.sussexstyle.co.uk

August 2013

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fashionstyle

Baroque stone necklace £20, Mood, Debenhams, Eastbourne, Hastings, Worthing www.debenhams.com Tartan handbag £405, Vivienne Westwood, House of Fraser, Chichester www.houseoffraser.co.uk

HELLO AUTUMN The finishing touch – tweed, tartan and topaz Suede lace-up Joanna £65, J by Jasper Conran, Debenhams, Eastbourne, Hastings, Worthing www.debenhams.com

Bright check scarf £45, Glen Prints, House of Fraser, Chichester www.houseoffraser.co.uk

Lace-up grey boot, Pontos £95, Bertie, Dune, House of Fraser, Chichester; Debenhams, Brighton www.dune.co.uk

Floral scarf £45, Untold, House of Fraser, Chichester www.houseoffraser.co.uk

Burgundy Romina bag £199, Hobbs, House of Fraser, Chichester; Hobbs, Brighton, Tunbridge Wells www.hobbs.co.uk

Smoked topaz fabric wrap bracelet £20, Butterfly by Matthew Williamson, Debenhams, Eastbourne, Hastings, Worthing www.debenhams.com

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Check tweed tote £55, Betty Jackson, Debenhams, Eastbourne, Hastings, Worthing www.debenhams.com

Classic tassel loafer, Layla £75, Bertie, Dune, House of Fraser, Chichester; Debenhams, Brighton www.dune.co.uk


NEW FOR AUTUMN / WINTER

beautiful designer handbags & accessories 13-15 The Royal Arcade, Worthing | 01903 212165 facebook.com/vanillahandbagsworthing | www.vanillabags.com


womenstyle

WORKWEAR Jacket £250, Trousers £180, Jaeger, Brighton, Chichester www.jaeger.co.uk

TRANSEASONAL INVESTMENT BUYS

Failsafe forever classics, remixed and styled-up for a chic contemporary twist

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LOOK 2

SUSSEX STYLE

LOOK 1

LOOK 3

Glasses £228.50, Tom Ford, Eyesite, Brighton www.eyesite.co.uk

Scarf £250, Jane Carr www.jane-carr.com Trench coat £325, LK Bennett, Brighton, Chichester www.lkbennett.com

Shirt £89, Best of British, M&S, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.marksandspencer.com

Jumper £24.95, Lands’ End www.landsend.co.uk

Dress £770, Gucci, Profile Fashion, Brighton www.profilefashion.com

Skirt £179, Autograph, M&S, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.marksandspencer.com

Bag £795, Aspinal of London, Fernhurst, Gatwick www.aspinaloflondon.com Trousers £45, Betty Johnson.Black, Debenhams, Brighton, Crawley, Eastbourne, Worthing www.debenhams.com

Shoes £185, LK Bennett, Brighton, Chichester www.lkbennett.com

Shoes £155, LK Bennett, Brighton, Chichester www.lkbennett.com

Shoes £79, Dune, Brighton, Chichester www.dune.co.uk www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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womenstyle

OFF DUTY CHIC

Cardigan £250, Dress £199, Jaeger, Brighton, Chichester www.jaeger.co.uk

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LOOK 2

Jumper £115, Day Birger et Mikkelsen, Doodie Stark, Lindfield www.doodiestark.co.uk

Jacket £330, Filippa K, Chichester www.filippa-k.com

Vest £10, Topshop, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.topshop.com

SUSSEX STYLE

LOOK 1

LOOK 3

Cardigan £149, Fenn Wright Manson www.fennwrightmanson.com

Shirt £30, South www.littlewoods.com

Trousers £39.50, Limited Edition, M&S, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.marksandspencer.com

Jeans £38, ASOS ww.asos.com

Bag £450, Aspinal of London, Fernhurst, Gatwick www.aspinaloflondon.com Jeans £170, DL1961, Doodie Stark, Lindfield www.doodiestark.co.uk

Boots £345, Isabel Marant, Neilson Boutique, Cuckfield www.neilsonboutique.co.uk

Shoes £195, Kurt Geiger London, Brighton, Gatwick www.kurtgeiger.com

Shoes £75, Dune, Brighton, Chichester www.dune.co.uk www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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womenstyle

EVENING WEAR

Dress £225, Bag £199, Cuff £65, Jaeger, Brighton, Chichester www.jaeger.co.uk

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Necklace £35, Jon Richard, Debenhams, Brighton, Crawley, Eastbourne, Worthing www.debenhams.com

Top £32, Next, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.next.co.uk

LOOK 2

Top £29.99, Zara, Brighton www.zara.com

SUSSEX STYLE

LOOK 1

LOOK 3

Jacket £69.99, Zara, Brighton www.zara.com

Skirt £50, Jonathan Saunders, Debenhams, Brighton, Crawley, Eastbourne, Worthing www.debenhams.com Dress £165, Bombshell, Doodie Stark, Lindfield www.doodiestark.co.uk

Trousers £99, Pied a Terre, House of Fraser, Chichester www.houseoffraser.co.uk

Shoes £46, Next, Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Worthing www.next.co.uk

Bag £1,035, CH Carolina Herrera 0203 441 0965

Boots £109.95, Moda in Pelle, Brighton, Chichester www.modainpelle.com

Eau de Parfum £100, Tom Ford Black Orchid, Space NK, Brighton www.uk.spacenk.com

Sandals £195, LK Bennett, Brighton, Chichester www.lkbennett.com www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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propertystyle

FOCUS: EAST GRINSTEAD What’s it all about?… wonders Emma Piper

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I

s East Grinstead on some sort of convergence of leylines? I’m told it is a melting pot of all sorts of faiths. East Grinstead has such a quaintly old English high street of wonky timber-framed buildings and Georgian townhouses straight out of a historical architectural digest that it surprises me to discover it is home to two high profile American religious organisations – the London Temple for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (longhand for Mormons) is north of the town while the UK headquarters of the Church of Scientology is to the south. Hey, does Tom Cruise or John Travolta ever visit? WHY It is the familiar story of families moving out of London looking for a better quality of life and for more bang for their bucks with house prices in London spiralling. The commute into Victoria takes 45 to 60 minutes and as East Grinstead is at the end of the line you can be assured of a seat on the journey in to London (always an attraction for the seasoned commuter). WHAT East Grinstead is a living architectural museum. This is a pretty ancient market town with a high street that is home to the longest continuous row of 14th century timber-framed buildings as well as others from the 15th and 16th centuries and fine examples from the Georgian and Regency periods, too. Overall East Grinstead is an overfilled chocolate box of architectural delights if you’re into that sort of thing (and I am). Wander along the High Street to the sandstone Grade I-listed Sackville College (open Wednesday to Sunday mid-June to mid-September) – one of the best preserved Jacobean almshouses in the country. WHERE Desirable areas include Dorman’s Park, an attractive, private estate north of East Grinstead, and Coombe Hill Road, south of the town centre. Both have big family houses starting around £700,000 and going up into a million or two. A mix of properties on the market includes a wellpresented four-bedroom late Vicotorian double-fronted twin-gabled house with architect-designed glass-walled


propertystyle extension for £785,000 (with Nicholas Irwin and Savills) and a quirky threebedroom house that is part of a former convent “with use of a magnificent deconsecrated chapel with marble altar” for £574,950 (with Robert Leech and Hamptons). Otherwise lots of sensible family homes pre- and post-war and new developments. FAMILY The town has a few good primary schools and secondary schools with good independent schools on the edge - these include Ashdown House (all the Johnson clan, including Boris and Rachel, went here) and Brambletye. Local primaries rated Good by Ofsted include Baldwins Hill, Blackwell, Estcots, Halsford Park, St Mary’s, West Hoathly and Ashurst Wood (although a couple of others ‘require improvement’), and Imberhorne secondary school is Outstanding. FOOD & DRINK There is a decent selection of cafes with New York Coffee Club, a little cosy café in East Grinstead Bookshop, and Casablanca with pavement tables where there is the chance to people watch. For pubs we were recommended Old Dunnings Mill – a converted 16th century mill given a refurb by a small local pub group and a country house library style makeover. If you want posh grub however head for five-star boutique hotel Alexander House which boasts sophisticated 2AA Rosette AG’s, and the more relaxed Reflections. SHOPPING At the prettiest end of the High Street is a terrific selection of indepedents such as the gorgeous East Grinstead Bookshop which is not only stuffed with new and secondhand books, but has gargoyles, a figurine with Anne Boleyn’s head, original cork cladding outside and a recently revealed oak-panelled room upstairs. Other shops include Market Square Food & Wine store, country clothing from FA Anderson (traditional family-run gunsmiths) and Clever

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Clogs footwear. Interiors stores include Kitchens Bespoke on London Road. The town centre also includes some of the usual high street brands and a Waitrose. For fashion boutiques it is worth heading out to Forest Row – check out Private Collection in The Square among others. TO DO Enjoy the romance of steam: The Bluebell Line – the UK’s first preserved standard gauge passenger railway has recently been extended to East Grinstead; services run daily into November to Shefield Park. More architectural and design treasures are to be found at The National Trust’s Standen, a stunning Arts & Crafts home with interiors by William Morris’ company. For entertainment, Chequer Mead is the local theatre and arts venue. Plus there’s a handsome new town museum (ultra contemporary) and, for the active, Deer Leap Park, south of East Grinstead, is 240 acres of dedicated bike tracks. WHAT’S HAPPENING There’s a new arts initiative underway. Example is a new contemporary art group aiming to put the visual arts on the agenda in the town and is launching Townscape next year - a dynamic art trail with 12 newly commisseioned artworks running from May to November 2014. THE DOWNSIDE The food offering in the town centre could be way more exciting. There’s a good variety of restaurants and cafes, but it needs to be ramped up a bit. WHAT DO YOU THINK? Do you agree? Give us the lowdown on life in East Grinstead. NEXT ISSUE We’re visiting Chichester and Hastings. Give us the inside knowledge on these two towns… Where do you eat, drink and chill, what are the best bits and do you have any irritations to share?


KITCHENSBESPOKE

With 20 years experience in high quality design, service and project management Rachael Workman set up Kitchens Bespoke to provide quality kitchens with thoughtful functional design at great value. Rachael will work with you to create a totally unique design and guide you through the often daunting array of options available, making practical and inspiring suggestions about the best use of space and materials. Most importantly she will listen to what you want, and what you must have, helping you to achieve your prefect kitchen. “Kitchens Bespoke offers a premium service for all our clients without the cost, assuring your investment through attention to detail and turnkey solutions� - Rachael Workman Nov 2012 Kitchens Bespoke, 88 London Road, East Grinstead, West Sussex RH19 1EP www.kitchensbespoke.co.uk


shoppingstyle

BEST OF SUSSEX A few of Norman Miller’s favourite Sussex finds

S

ome people say being uberniche is a bad thing, but 103-year-old Shirley Leaf and Petal proves it depends on the niche! As the name suggests, this world-renowned Hastings emporium makes and sells artificial leaves and petals fashioned from a dizzying range of materials, from flameproofed parchment to leather. Once these floral treasures adorned Victorian and Edwardian ball-gowns, but today the shop serves a glamorous global market encompassing national theatre and opera companies (think Glyndebourne), Hollywood film-makers (Steven Spielberg is a past customer) plus haute couture

designers. The thousands of petals that fell in Gladiator were from Shirley Leaf and Petal as are the leaves swirling across the BBC weather forecast every autumn. There is also a wonderful little on-site museum crammed with thousands of vintage cutting tools and flower irons plus examples of past creations.

From their Ditchling gallery and shop, Anton Pruden and Rebecca Smith are two jewellers and silversmiths who merge traditional craftsmanship steeped in the Arts & Craft tradition with contemporary art and design. Check out the brilliant use of pearls in various hammered silver cuffs and rings, or join clients ranging from cathedrals to swish New York and Tokyo stores for stunning handmade silver objects – we think the Skein silver tea service is destined to become a modern classic. Anton Pruden and Rebecca Smith, South Street, Ditchling 01273 846338 www.prudenandsmith.com

Talks given and groups can visit by arrangement. Shirley Leaf and Petal, High Street, Hastings 01424 427793 www.martin-enterprises.eu/shirley

With another British triumph in the Tour de France plus all kinds of cycling initiatives popping up, let’s hear it for Burdekin & Son Vintage Bikes, a Brighton-based family firm whose mission in life is to keep our love going for classic bikes from the 1920s to 1980s. Fancy a Raleigh Twenty, a 1950s New Hudson ladies town bike or something with a particularly fine period loop frame? These people not only know what those are, they can sell you one! So what are you waiting for - on yer bike! Burdekin & Son Vintage Bikes, 07778007198, burdekinvintagebikes.com

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THE

SQUARE HIGHWOOD HORSHAM

THE KENSINGTON

The Square, Highwood, now open Don’t miss the chance to live at The Square, Horsham’s finest new address

Last few remaining four bedroom townhouses The Square’s new centrepiece designed by Marcus Cornish

The Kensington is a beautifully designed 4 bedroom home with flexible living over three floors and a luxury specification. The spacious open plan living/dining area opens out onto a garden room which lets the light flood in, and the designer fitted kitchen comes with integrated appliances. Upstairs the master bedroom has an ensuite with both shower and bath, as well as a dressing area with fitted storage, perfect for modern day living.

The beautiful living area in the new showhome

The Square has proven extremely popular, with just a few properties remaining. With the Help to Buy scheme a beautiful new home at The Square, Highwood can be yours with as little as 5% deposit and a 5 year interest free loan*.

Available from £485,000 www.highwoodhorsham.co.uk/the-square To book your priority appointment, call: 01403

334 334 or visit our Sales Suite to find out more:

Highwood Sales Suite, Hills Farm Lane, Horsham, West Sussex RH12 1EP. Open Daily 10am - 5pm Proud to be a member of the Berkeley Group of companies

Our vision for your future

*Ask our Sales Advisors for more details about the Help to Buy scheme at Highwood, available on selected plots. Photography of The Square and The Kensington showhome at Highwood.


areastyle

EASTBOURNE REDISCOVERED

Where modern art and bingo mix Eastbourne is a bit of a south coast secret by Emma Piper

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SUSSEX STYLE

The Grand

E

astbourne is changing and changing fast. In its Victorian heyday it was the queen of seaside resorts and the elegant wedding cake confection hotels in whites, creams and pastels along the seafront are testimony to this. Then it became known for its genteel ageing population; it was a bit God’s waiting room. But new development to the east and a great clutch of schools celebrating good Ofsted results have brought in the young families with the population increasing by some 30,000 over the last couple of decades. WHY “Cleanliness,” says Mike Reid of Reid & Dean estate agents. “People like the cleanliness of Eastbourne, it’s an unusual one, but important none the less. That and the mix of private and state schools with good Ofsted results.” Reid & Dean have seen a 50 per cent increase in buyers from outside the area over the past decade and an increase in buyers from overseas, too, while the average age of the population is spiralling downwards with an influx of young families. Mike adds: “Prices are half those in Brighton and there’s a good range of property.” Prices are cheaper because the one

and a half hour journey to London is a bit much for a regular commute. But in his role as Director of the Chamber of Commerce, Mike is also aware that many moving to Eastbourne work from home or are small business owners and not reliant on commuting to London. WHAT The joy of Eastbourne is its setting with the splendour of the South Downs on one side running down into the town (the South Downs Way starts here) and the sea on the other. This is the south coast at its old-fashioned best with a plethora of public parks, expanse of pebble beach, spindly pier, promenade with road train, beach huts and wide sea views. Until 1850 Eastbourne consisted of an old downland village called Bourne (now Old Town) and a few scattered hamlets. But the coming of the railway coincided with the popularity of seabathing and the local landowners (Gilberts and Cavendishes) joined forces to develop Eastbourne into an upmarket Victorian resort. WHERE Ratton with its big family houses at the foot of the downs is considered desirable, but the area is very quiet. Meads, west of the city centre, with its grand avenues of big Victorian villas

tends to attract the money – although complexes of flats have been built on the sites of some of the villas. Many prefer quaint Old Town with pebble fronted period farmhouses and rows of pretty Victorian and Edwardian terraced cottages with fretwork detailing. Upperton, just a few minutes walk from the railway station and town centre, has gracious roads of splendid Victorian townhouses. Families are especially interested in newer developments east of the town including Sovereign Harbour which has a swathe of uninspiring modern development as well as some more attractive newish townhouses. Its marina, which is busy with boats and visitors in summer sitting enjoying its waterside restaurants and wine bars can, like all marinas, feel chilly and exposed in winter. THE LOOK Grand. All the splendour of a Victorian seaside resort with parks and elegant leafy avenues of big villas and streets of terraced cottages. Parts are reminiscent of Hampstead – no, really. FAMILY A plethora of parks, including Motcombe Park (around the source of the Bourne stream that gave www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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Motcombe Gardens

areastyle

Attractive townscape

Sovereign Harbour Marina

Eastbourne its name) and Gildredge Park in Old Town, and Princes Park (33 acres with boating pond), appeals to families. Plus there are plenty of amusements such as Fort Fun and Treasure Island and the long, long stretches of beach. If it is decent schooling you are after, relax. Take your pick. Primary schools Shinewater and Langney are rated Outstanding by Ofsted, while a whole raft are rated Good including St John’s Mead, The Haven Methodist Primary School, West Rise, Ocklynge, Bourne, Tollgate Community and Parkland Junior Community School. For secondaries, Bishop Bell is rated Outstanding, while Causeway, Cavendish, Eastbourne Academy, Lindfield and Willingdon are among others rated Good. There is a good choice of private schools, too, such as Bede’s Prep School whose alumni includes Eddie Izzard, and Eastbourne College, also attended by Eddie. St Andrew’s Prep is opening a baby room for children from 12-24 months next month. FOOD & DRINK Recommendations include La Cantina, Bibendum gastropub and its relatively new sister Bibendum French. Pomodoro e Mozarella is a favourite while Mirabelle in the Grand Hotel is known for fine dining. Morgans is under relatively new management and creating a stir.

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SHOPPING There are few empty shops and the Arndale Centre is about to be extended due to retail demand. In the town centre there’s a good mix of quality interiorsorientated shops such as Strawberry Hill Fireplaces, quality furniture from family-owned David Salmon and a rug gallery. Fashion stores include upmarket brands such as Phase 8 and Gerry Weber. ‘Little Chelsea’ has a number of quirky independents including a glass engraving studio, With Love boutique (opened a year ago next month by Holly when she was just 22) and an urban farmshop. Outside the centre discover independents in Old Town including jewellers, collectibles and antiques, while in Meads there’s a gorgeous florist, Grand Flowers, a deli, an old fashion pharmacy, tea rooms and interiors stores such as Prestige Interiors. TO DO Culture in the sunshine. Feel the mix from bingo to contemporary art, Eastbourne has it all. An attractive townscape groups the Congress Theatre, Devonshire Park Theatre,

Winter Gardens and The Towner Gallery alongside Devonshire Park International Lawn Tennis Club. It’s lovely. I mean really lovely. Towner Gallery is described as the contemporary art gallery for south-east England and the current exhibition Lyons Teashop Lithographs is its most visited paid-for exhibition yet (on until 22 September). Otherwise on the seafront there’s a swimming pool and more tennis courts at one end and the Italian Gardens at the other. And don’t forget to stretch your legs with a stroll to Beachy Head. THE DOWNSIDE Could do a lot better on the eating out front – more choice please. Although signs are that the food offering is on the up. WHAT DO YOU THINK? Tell us what you think about life in Eastbourne. Next month we are visiting Chichester and Hastings. Could two towns be more different? Email: emma.piper@ sandrpublishing.co.uk


traditional and contemporary furniture

116 South Street | Eastbourne | 01323 722921 | www.davidsalmon.co.uk


travelstyle

View towards the Mound and the Castle by night

GREAT SCOT! There is SO much more to Edinburgh than the Festival. Norman Miller is our guide

S

cotch the idea that Edinburgh is all about that August cultural shindig, when its lovely streets get clogged with way too many visitors as well as way too many comedians/desperate thesps trying to get an audience. Instead, think of Edinburgh as simply one of Europe’s most beguiling, and intriguing, capitals. Cobbled medieval lanes mingle with sweeping Georgian crescents, sturdy hills cradle secretive dips. Its ancient stones exude an air of mystery, and even the local buses go to places that sound like some fable: Hunter’s Tryst, The Jewel, Restalrig (we’ll forget Wallyford).

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Savvy visitors flick through Edinburgh’s contrasting layers. Grassmarket hums with trendy retail and raucousness below the Castle’s timeless merger of dark cliff and granite. The stern Holyrood Palace – Her Maj’s local residence – looks askance at the adjacent 21st century architectural mish-mash of the Scottish Parliament beneath the Salisbury Crags, a wild slice of Highlands dropped into the city. Down by the old docks in Leith, archetypes of Trainspotting’s Begby step out amid Michelin-starred gastro-shrines like The Kitchin and Martin Wishart’s. Autumn is a grand time to visit, as the Caledonian evenings draw in and antique street lamps cast a glow on

the cobbles. Sea mists curl in off the Forth to up the atmospherics, and music wafts even more temptingly from cosy hangouts like The Jazz Bar or the folky Sandy Bell’s. It’s a perfect time to grab a pew at fantastic bars like The Cumberland - a boozer star of Alexander McCall Smith’s The World According to Bertie – or the Victorian splendour of The Voodoo Rooms. Choose between Scottish ales and champagne to wash down oysters at the gorgeously tiled Cafe Royal, or order a “pot-tail” - cocktails served from teapots into porcelain cups – at the wood-panelled Roseleaf Bar in Leith.


SUSSEX STYLE

Street decoration, Leith

You want style bars? Check out the burnished glitter of Tigerlily or the chandeliered Dragonfly. Cocktail cognoscenti, meanwhile, must hit The Bramble – a laidback speakeasy regularly featured among the World’s Best Bars, tucked away behind an unobtrusive basement door on Queen Street. Night owls with dancing shoes should make an early hours beeline for Cabaret Voltaire, a music-filled cave carved from rock beneath the Royal Mile. All this assumes you haven’t been exhausted by Edinburgh’s daytime fun. Outdoors types might like to take the 26 bus down to Edinburgh’s seaside suburb Portobello to suck in salty air by the rippling Firth of Forth, or wander through the New Town – though “New” here means Georgian - to the 17th century Royal Botanic Gardens to leaf through the largest collection of Chinese plants outside Asia and a Highland heath, then warming up in the tropical temps inside Britain’s tallest glasshouse. In this most cultured of cities there are also, of course, galleries galore. Two of my favourites are the Dean Gallery and Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, facing each other across sculpturedotted parkland 20 minutes stroll off the west end of Princes Street. Their 18th century exteriors might imply dusty period oils but inside bright spaces showcase retro Scots, European Surrealists and mod masters from Picasso to Hirst. Back in town, the Scottish National Portrait Gallery is a neo-Gothic sandstone palace where you eyeball

great Scots ranging from old Jacobites to modern jokers. Commanding Princes Street, the Scottish National Gallery gathers historic A-list gems from Raphael to Renoir and Rodin. The National Museum of Scotland on Chambers Street could occupy a day in itself – pick and mix among the permanent collections and check out the special exhibitions. While gobsmacking views over gardens to the Castle and Old Town skyline make Princes Street one of the world’s most beautiful shopping thoroughfares, for distinctive goodies to stuff in your case head elsewhere. Around Grassmarket, marvel at millinery magic in Fab Hatrix, rummage for vintage at Armstrongs or browse design tomes at Analogue. Pie In The Sky has small-batch designer lines on nearby Cockburn Street. In the New Town, 21st Century Kilts, Jane Davidson and Kakao are fashionista beacons on cobbled Thistle Street.

The new National Museum of Scotland building

View of the Castle from Princes Street Gardens

Feeling hungry by now? While sad Sassenachs still make lame jokes about Scottish food, leave them muttering while you enjoy one of Britain’s best restaurant scenes. Compare Tom Kitchin’s two Edinburgh gaffs, going haute at The Kitchin then clawing back some dosh with old-school Scots classics at his new gastropub Scran and Scallie. On Hanover Street, Urban Angel and The Dogs vie for the Best Affordable Nosh award. For grand seafood with a grand street view book at the first-floor Ondine on George IV Bridge. As for the prettiest dining room in Edinburgh, let me present 21212, where Michelin-garlanded Paul Kitching

toys with bold culinary pairings on a leafy Georgian terrace. Like Edinburgh, it’s history and pleasure elegantly combined. Grab a BA flight to Edinburgh from Gatwick (four a day) from £39 one-way www.britishairways.com www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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beautystyle

THE BEAUTY SPOT

We try: Sprays When you’re tired, when it’s hot or when you want your room or yourself to smell nice, a quick spritz does the trick. Face Dermalogica’s Multi Active Toner, £26.40, is a gentle hydrating toner containing extracts of cucumber and arnica. Available from Sussex salons including Black Door Beauty, Heathfield 01435 862524, Absolute Beauty, Seaford 01323 899768 and Langtons Hair & Beauty, Lewes 01273 477678 www.dermalogica.co.uk

Model example The Beauty Queen recently met former top model George (Georgina)

Jones, who has founded her own organic skincare range. George was once the face of Burberry and Armani as well as being Company Magazine’s Face of the ‘90s before giving up modelling to train as an osteopath. Now a mum of three, her online Bathing Beauty store went live this summer and features all manner of lovely products handmade by George herself, with many suitable for people who suffer from sensitive skin and eczema. Check out Revive Bath Salts, £12.95, Super Luxe Rose and Shea Butter Soap, £4.50, and Mount Olympus Body Scrub, £9.95 www.bathing-beauty.co.uk

In the Shadows

Clinique has just launched two new eye products: All About Shadow and All About Shadow Primer for Eyes which is designed to stop creases on your eyes (never a great look). The Primer comes in four shades to suit a range of skin tones and costs £20; All About Shadow is £16 for a single to £28 for a palette of four. Visit Clinique counters at Debenhams and larger Boots www.clinique.co.uk

Body Q’s Fine Fragrance Body Spray, £2.29, comes in three options, fruity smelling Balance, Awe, a citrusy fragrance, and Radiance which is a floral scent. Perfect for keeping in your gym or handbag for a quick freshen up. Find them at Sainsbury’s and Boots.

Multipurpose

Mini Marvel

Sometimes size isn’t everything! The Beauty Queen has been drying her locks with the Babyliss Nano Hairdryer recently and highly recommends it, particularly if you go away regularly to places where you need to take your own. It is half the size of a regular dryer but still packs a punch in terms of getting the job done. The Nano costs £14.99 and is available in a range of four jazzy colours from Boots and Argos.

Potions and Possibilities new all natural body, linen and home spray is a bargain £6.99 for one product with three uses and comes in two fragrances, Bluebell and Fig and Blackcurrant www.potions.co.uk

A sticky solution

Creating perfectly winged eyeliner is no easy feat. Whether you use pencil or a pen type liner, however steady your hand is, one false move and you look less Audrey Hepburn and more Alice Cooper. Now you can actually buy stick-on eyeliner which you peel off a backing sheet, stick into position on your lid and peel off again when you’ve had enough. The Beauty Queen isn’t totally convinced! Eye Rock Designer Liner, £6.99, www.rockbeautylondon.com

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Ladies Designer Wear, Accesories and Shoes

Visit us for all your festive party wear and lots of great gift ideas

1 High Street, Tunbridge Wells, Kent, TN1 1UL 01892 513613 | www.kitchclothing.co.uk Kitch_210x297.indd 1

06/12/2012 17:37


spastyle

THE ALEXANDER TECHNIQUE Utopia discovered and it’s just outside East Grinstead

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SUSSEX STYLE

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ho would have thought this escape was so near? Set close to the Surrey border within 120 acres of a countryside estate, glamorous Alexander House Hotel and Utopia Spa is a prestigious five star hotel renowned for spectacular interiors, personable service and, of course, their awardwinning Utopia Spa. The hotel’s dramatic subterranean spa is carefully set with mood lighting, relaxation spaces and a notable Grecian-themed design that helps to compel spa day guests to slip easily into a state of utter tranquillity. When you are not soaking up the gentle atmosphere, guests have the pleasure of dipping in and out of the wonderful facilities. There is a main exercise pool as well as a therapy pool which sits blissfully beneath a night sky dome. The therapy pool has a variation of pressure jets that can stream into your muscles, provoking welcome release of any tension. For those of you who prefer a more intense heat, there are sauna, steam rooms and an indoor bubble tub. If you like the contrast between two temperatures the spa’s outdoor hot tub is the perfect place to unwind.

Those spa day guests in the mood for something a little more energetic are always invited to join one of the spa fitness classes such as bodyblitz, bootcamp or pilates. Or, if you prefer the great outdoors, why not make use of the complimentary mountain bikes, trekking trails and tennis courts! The spa offers a host of 25, 55 and even 85 minute treatments. From a luxurious facial to an all over body massage there is plenty to enjoy. Plus, there are a few specialist treatments such as ‘A Brush from Heaven’ – well it could be.

However you choose to soak up the Alexander House Utopia Spa you are promised a day of utter bliss. Alexander House Hotel and Utopia Spa Turners Hill East Grinstead West Sussex 01342 714914 www.alexanderhouse.co.uk

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Rowena Bird is co-founder and a product inventor of Lush Cosmetics and has been in the beauty industry for 34 years www.lush.co.uk My essential product Lush’s Ultrabalm. Vaseline is such a staple, but in my opinion not a very ‘nice’ product as it is made from mineral oil/petroleum, so a few years ago I created our own natural version made from ingredients including rose wax and organic jojoba oil. It can be used for anything and everything. My best piece of beauty or hair advice Exfoliate and moisturise. I love the feeling of a good old scrub, the thought that all the dead skin is being sloughed away mmmmmmm, and then to moisturise so my skin feels plumped up, shiny and smooth. My favourite beauty treatments One of my jobs is to sign off new therapists before they are allowed to work on customers at our Lush spas. When it comes to signing off a Synaethesia massage, I am in my element. An hour and 20 minutes of no phones and being able to be alone with my thoughts to the accompaniment of bird song and essential oil blends makes a huge difference to how I feel. My biggest beauty faux pas is False eyelashes. I’ve just had the individual ones applied and the therapist did a great job but sadly however fabulous I think other people look with them on, I don’t. I feel a bit like Barbara Cartland and not in a good way. Beauty for me is about Laughing. Anyone and everyone looks amazing when they laugh, it’s infectious and a great stress release and makes the face more relaxed and younger looking too.

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TIPS FROM THE TOP

Have you ever wondered if the beauty experts really do swear by the products they promote and what they consider to be beautiful? Sussex Style’s Beauty Editor caught up with a few and asked them the following: Grace Benson is a professional freelance make-up artist based in Hastings. She specialises in bridal, fashion and television work www.gracebensonmakeup.com My essential product MAC Mineralize Skin Finish Natural pressed powder. I love the soft finish and the fact it finishes my make-up beautifully while still maintaining a glow! My best piece of beauty advice Don’t use make-up wipes to take your make up off! Most contain alcohol that will dry out your skin and the fabric can also be too abrasive. In an emergency okay, but every day? No! My favourite beauty treatments Not exactly a favourite but getting my eyebrows done is at the top of my list. Having them threaded, plucked or waxed by a professional can take years off your face by sculpting and lifting your features. My biggest beauty faux pas is Although my job is all about make-up, often I can’t be bothered putting make-up on myself! My eyebrows are nonexistent without pencil and the bags under my eyes are huge, but often that extra 15 minutes in bed in the morning is too tempting, and I tell myself it saves me the job of taking it off at night! Beauty for me is about Being true to yourself and not worrying too much what other people think .If you want to go out with bright purple eye shadow to match your bright purple top or wear huge eyelashes then that’s fine - if you feel good then do it!


SUSSEX STYLE

Darren Brewer is managing director, TONI&GUY, Brighton www.toniandguy.com My essential product It has to be mousse which is just as popular now as back in the ‘80s. The label.m Volume Mousse is my favourite and we used it constantly at shows like London Fashion Week to prep hair and provide a good texture to work with. My best piece of advice Simple - have regular haircuts and I’m not just saying that! A trim or cut once every six weeks really does prevent hair weakening and splitting - the two most common causes of dry, damaged hair.

Suzanne Colston-Lynch is head of training for Neal’s Yard Remedies and has more than 20 years’ experience in cosmetics, skin science and aromatherapy www.nealsyardremedies.com My essential product Our Wild Rose Beauty Balm is a true desert island product and I don’t travel anywhere without it. It’s my mask when my skin looks tired, my lip balm all year round and is my finishing touch before heading out when I dab a little on my cheekbones for extra radiance. My best piece of beauty advice A facial oil is a girl’s best friend. A couple of drops under your moisturiser fights free radical damage and the essential fatty acids balance all skin types - even oily!

My favourite beauty treatment For clients I’d have to pick a hair treatment naturally which would be the label.m Intensive Mask – it is fantastic for hair and also shields against heat styling and UV rays.

My favourite beauty treatment is I would recommend Facial Rejuvenation, a combination of Indian face massage and other healing techniques including acupressure which has the effect of a natural facelift.

My biggest beauty faux pas is The ‘80s – enough said! Some very dodgy fashions and hair styles!

Beauty for me is about Achieving radiance from within; remember you are what you eat. Be happy with who you are and your confidence will shine. And smile!

Beauty for me is about I’m biased obviously but healthy looking glossy locks represent my beauty ideal. My current inspiration comes from Edie Campbell and Karly Kloss, both models of the moment who have chopped off their locks and still maintain natural shiny tresses.

Nicola Elliott is founder of Neom Organics, the cult luxury organic home fragrance and body care collection www.neoorganics.com My essential product I love Neom body oil in Real Luxury. Body oils get a bad rap, mainly because they are made from mineral based oils and create that greasy skin thing. Ours is organic and sinks straight into the skin, leaving it really nourished because of the vitamin content. My best piece of beauty advice Buy grapeseed oil to use as a make-up remover – very cheap, effective, great on the skin and no nasty chemicals. My favourite beauty treatments A serious all over sports massage does wonders for me, I don’t like anything too fluffy. My biggest beauty faux pas is Being lazy with make-up. I start the day okay and never have a second to re-apply anything so I catch sight of myself in the rearview mirror on the way home and think, ‘My God!’ Beauty for me is about Nourishing yourself, feeling good and putting good things on your body. I never even dress for an occasion, instead I dress for my mood (which makes things harder to plan but I feel so much comfier!) www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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Helford chairs and Bryher table from OKA

GARDEN PARTY Make the most of summer, turn you garden into a place to entertain, Sofie Allsopp suggests‌

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SUSSEX STYLE

Chelsea alfresco seating from La Source

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onsidering our climate is famously unpredictable, it is surprising how much time we spend outside. Last year’s HSBC Garden Survey found the average Briton spends 95 days – more than a quarter of the year – in the garden. However, when it comes to comfort and style we are a bit half-hearted about alfresco living, a couple of deck chairs and a disposable barbecue is often as good as it gets. I think we should make the most of our Indian summers, look across the Pond for some inspiration and make the outside of our homes as comfortable and stylish as they are inside. The key to successful alfresco living is a bit of shelter, a shaded area that can also protect you from the odd shower. Nothing ruins a meal like having to run for cover from a little burst of rain only for the sun to come out two minutes later. A pergola, either free-standing or lean-to, is the perfect solution, and The Rustic Rose Pergola from Gazebo Direct is both solid and good value. Plant a speedy climber like a wisteria or clematis at the base of each vertical support and in a few years you will have a beautiful floral canopy that will provide shade and protection from light rain. If you want a more instant option try the Lean To Pergola also

from Gazebo Direct. This pergola abuts a supporting wall and you can lay corrugated plastic sheeting down on the top to create an awning/roof which climbing plants can then grow over. Try planting a Graham Thomas – a fragrant old English yellow climbing rose which flowers throughout the summer if deadheaded and can reach three metres in a few years. Outdoor dining sets have come on leaps and bounds in recent years and there are now some very chic options such as the OKA Orseno Outdoor Table set in Rattan. This large circular table with three curved benches seats 12, is weather-proof and quite beautiful. It isn’t cheap but it should last many a summer. A more frugal and conventional option would be the Greenfingers Chessington Hardwood six-person rectangular set. When buying any hardwood furniture make sure it is FSC-certified from sustainable forests – illegal logging in places like the Congo and Borneo is having catastrophic effects on endangered animals and their environment. I think half the fun of eating outside is making it feel a bit like you are eating inside, as though the garden is an extension of your home, a room without

a roof. I like to go to town, make it opulent and fun, a Mad Hatter’s tea party, no paper plates and plastic cups here! OKA’s Pasha china range is electric and its vibrant primary colour patterned plates and bowls remind me of gypsy caravans. Team with coloured glassware like Graham and Green’s peony glasses. Lay the table with cutlery and napkins and finish with flowers. Again I fall back on Graham and Green, their rainbow vases are really pretty and look especially good with single stemmed blooms like peonies or roses, perhaps interspersed with sprigs of rosemary to add that heady Mediterranean scent. Lighting is essential if you want to enjoy your garden after sunset. Permanent electric lights are now cheap and easy thanks to solar power. Single LED solar powered lights that charge during the day and light up at night can be dotted among your borders or used to edge pathways and lawns. I particularly like the John Lewis House collection Solar LED Green Jar Light as they give off a lovely glow and are pretty enough to be used on the table as well as on the ground. I love Chinese lanterns, too, as there is something fun and exotic about them and the B&Q Raphia Paper Lantern Party Light set is as good as any and cheap as chips; you can string them www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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interiorstyle

Bilbao lounging set, Devon seat, lanterns, LED light jars, Weber fireplace and Philips projector, John Lewis

up from your pergola or awning to illuminate your dining table from above. One of life’s greatest pleasures is sitting around a fire, watching logs burning, staring into the night’s sky and looking at the stars. In America no garden worth its salt is without a fire pit, and sitting around toasting marshmallows is a rite of passage for most children. But you don’t need a garden the size of a football pitch to enjoy a fire. The Wormed That Turned has a cast iron fire pit for a wallet friendly price. To watch the embers till the wee hours in comfort opt for a Beanbag Crazy Might-B Outdoor Beanbag. These beanbags look like a cross between a triangle and an armchair and they come in an array of bright colours from lime green to royal blue. If your taste in seating is a little more refined then the Westminster Seville two-seater sofa in seagrass from Greenfingers might be right up your street.

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Orseno round table set from OKA

B&Q www.diy.com Beanbag Crazy www.beanbagcrazy.co.uk Gazebo Direct www.gazebodirect.co.uk Graham & Green www.grahamandgreen.co.uk Greenfingers www.greenfingers.com Homebase www.homebase.co.uk John Lewis www.johnlewis.com La Source 01403 218688 www.lasourcedesign.com Oka www.okadirect.com

Chimeneas and firepits from Homebase

The Worm That Turned www.worm.co.uk


Our self-catering holiday cottages enjoy fabulous coastal or rural locations across Kent and Sussex, perfect for exploring beautiful countryside, coastal resorts and historic properties and gardens.

Visit our new website and book online at www.bramleyandteal.co.uk or call us now on 01580 860840


highstyle

THE JERWOOD THE VERDICT?

How Hastings replaced a coach park with a star turn

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t’s hard to understand now why some locals got so hot and bothered about the opening last year of Hasting’s Jerwood Gallery that they burned effigies of it. As well as the usual NIMBY muttering about “modern monstrosities”, the main contention seemed to be the Jerwood would take over a coach parking space whose loss would strike a terrible blow at trade. OK, I don’t have stats but I bet the Jerwood has more than counterbalanced lost coach parties with an increasing flow of highspending visitors who otherwise wouldn’t have dreamed of visiting a town that, despite its gorgeous High Street, could still do with help on the road to regeneration. Oh, did I mention that the bit of coach park the Jerwood didn’t fill became a new public space and community centre

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staging fantastic weekly events? The locals didn’t even pay for it, as funding came via the government’s Sea Change programme to lift coastal towns. Nor should the NIMBYs have worried about a modern monstrosity. Crouching neatly between a fairground and a fish market, the gallery – designed by Hana Loftus and Tom Grieve of HAT Projects - brilliantly blends with its surroundings. As Observer architecture critic Rowan Moore put it: “The Jerwood is not embarrassed by the stuff and clobber around it, and does not embarrass them”. Wallpaper* summed it up as “a perfectly formed, modest space, that doesn’t try too hard”. The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) summed it up by giving it a National Award this year.

Outside, the £4m building is clad with 8,000 bespoke hand-glazed black tiles that forge a link to the tall black clapboard 19th century “net shops” surrounding it on Hasting’s busy working fishing beach. The slight oily sheen they take on in certain light adds a nod to low-brow industrialism. Just two storeys high, the Jerwood glories in simple restraint. Its seven little gallery spaces are cosy, calm and welcoming, with windows and terraces overlooking fishing fleet paraphernalia that set the art as part of the town rather than separate. The collection of around 100 works focuses on British artists from WW1 to the 1960s, including favourites of mine like Lowry, Terry Frost, Craigie Aitchison, Edward Burra, Rose Wylie and Prunella Clough. Special exhibitions include 21st century offerings to keep things up to date. The first floor Webbe’s café offers a brilliant view of the bustle of beached boats and piscine trade on the fishing beach and the shingly ocean panorama beyond. Its menu celebrates local produce: heaps of crab; a seafood plate piled with potted shrimp, soused herring and Hastings smoked salmon; Sussex wild boar sausages. Does anyone really miss the coach park?


BMW Economics

Chandlers BMW

WE PAY ATTENTION TO EVERY DETAIL. YOU PAY LESS PER MONTH. THE BMW 3 SERIES TOURING FROM CHANDLERS BMW. Check out the table below and you’ll appreciate that’s a small price to pay for a BMW 3 Series Sport Touring with Sport seats, Sport Plus driving mode and 17” alloy wheels as standard. Particularly when you include Business Navigation and 5 years’ comprehensive service cover,** courtesy of BMW Economics. Existing customers may also qualify for a Loyalty Deposit Contribution of £500.º BMW Select finance representative example: BMW 318d Sport Touring with Business Navigation System and 5 years’ comprehensive service cover. Term

47 Monthly payments

On the road cash price*

Customer deposit

Dealer deposit contribution

Total deposit

Total amount of credit

Option to purchase fee^

Optional final payment

Total amount payable

Rate of interest

48 months

£349

£31,025

£4,318.16

£2,262

£6,580.16

£24,444.84

£10

£11,489.40

£34,482.56

4.9% fixed

Representative 4.9 APR

BMW ECONOMICS. For more information or to arrange a test drive†, call us on the numbers below or scan the QR code with your smartphone.

Chandlers Brighton

Chandlers Hailsham

Chandlers Worthing

Victoria Road, Portslade, Brighton, East Sussex BN41 1YH

Gleneagles Drive, Hailsham, East Sussex BN27 3UA

Water Lane, Angmering, West Sussex BN16 4EH

01273 922265

www.chandlersbrightonbmw.co.uk

01323 342308

www.chandlershailshambmw.co.uk

01903 371297

www.chandlersworthingbmw.co.uk

Official fuel economy figures for the BMW 318d Sport Touring: Urban 50.4mpg (5.8l/100km). Extra Urban 72.4mpg (4.1l/100km). Combined 62.8mpg (4.7l/100km). CO2 emissions 123g/km. Finance offer excludes metallic paint at £645 RRP as shown. Offer available on selected new BMW 3 Series Touring models ordered between 1 July 2013 and 30 September 2013 and registered by 31 December 2013, subject to availability. Finance example is based on a BMW Select agreement for a BMW 318d Sport Touring with Business Navigation System and 5 years’ comprehensive service cover, with a contract mileage of 32,000 miles and an excess mileage charge of 6p per mile. **Servicing must be carried out at a BMW Service Authorised Workshop. Excessive wear and tear or misuse not covered. Second brake fluid service not covered. Price quoted is applicable for BMW 3 Series Touring models. Please ask your dealer, or visit www.bmw.co.uk/serviceinclusive for prices for all models and full BMW Service Inclusive terms and conditions. *On the road cash price is based on manufacturer’s recommended retail price and includes 3 year BMW Dealer Warranty, BMW Emergency Service, 12 months’ road fund licence, vehicle first registration fee, delivery, number plates and VAT. ^Option to purchase fee and optional final payment payable at the end of the agreement if you decide to purchase the vehicle. Excess mileage charges and vehicle condition charges may be payable if you return the vehicle. Prices are correct at time of publication August 2013 and are subject to change without notice. Retail customers only. Finance is subject to credit acceptance and available to over 18s in the UK only (excluding the Channel Islands and Isle of Man). Guarantees and indemnities may be required. Advertised finance is provided by BMW Financial Services, Bartley Way, Hook, Hampshire RG27 9UF. We commonly, but not exclusively, introduce customers to BMW Financial Services. This introduction does not amount to independent financial advice. †Test drive subject to applicant status and availability. º£500 BMW Loyalty Deposit Contribution available on selected 1, 3, 5 Series and X1 models. Offers only available on a BMW or MINI Select agreement for BMW & MINI retail customers only where the existing vehicle is registered at the same address. Customer deposit must be equal to or greater than the Loyalty Deposit Contribution to qualify. No cash alternative available. Subject to availability and withdrawal at any time. Offer not available in conjunction with BMW 50/50 offer.


interiorstyle

THAT personal touch T

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he success of The Upholsterer would, according to Mary Portas, appear to go against the commonly held perception of what is happening on Britain’s high streets. This personalised, quality, independent supplier of upholstery services, individually tailored curtains, fabrics, bespoke furniture, and interior design services has not only survived the recession but moved from strength to strength.


In line with The Upholsterer’s philosophy of tailoring their services to meet customers’ specific needs, all curtains are handmade locally. A free consultancy service includes design advice, measurement, finish and trimmings guidance to ensure customers’ budget and style requirements are met. Similarly with blinds, where the sheer volume of blind types and operating mechanisms can be difficult to fathom, free tailored consultancy and guidance is also available. As the space in which we live has such a vital influence on our state of being, The Upholsterer is happy to offer decoration advice transforming a blank canvas into a finished living area with a samples service that enables customers to colour match and complement existing features, shades and fabrics. For those who cannot find the exact design or shape they want Milos has years of experience in designing and creating bespoke furniture. From sofas and chairs to upscale children’s furniture, Milos offers a highly focused and personalised approach to meeting customers’ needs. The workshop is on-site and potential and existing customers are encouraged to view the high quality of workmanship for which the business has become known.

Husband and wife team Laura and Milos Jandac opened The Upholsterer in October 2009. Milos is the upholsterer and brings more than 20 years experience to the craft he cares so much about. Laura studied textile design at Leeds University, supplementing this with a diploma in interior design at the renowned KLC School of Design in Chelsea Harbour. Fabrics are Laura’s passion which, combined with her creative abilities, enable her to help

clients find exciting solutions to their design and fabric needs. A full upholstery service includes advice about a range of options such as piping finish, deep buttoning, padding and replacement springs, while a choice of more than 2,500 fabrics meets clients’ varied needs, budgets and preferences from conservative to contemporary and eclectic.

Laura and Milos have created an approach based totally around the customer and their needs. Their shop is run with a relaxed ambience and style that makes The Upholsterer a haven for anyone wanting to steer away from standard furnishings in favour of creating their own personal touch. The Upholsterer Midhurst 01730 810284 www.theupholsterermidhurst.co.uk

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SUSSEX STYLE

ADVERTORIAL FEATURE


interiorstyle

Calligaris Planet & jam

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SUSSEX STYLE

HOME COMFORTS

Kiss Elephant

Make yourself at home. David Salmon Furnishers recommends…

Lincoln

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rmstrong are a new range of recliners, made in Germany and brilliantly engineered with an incredibly light action. They have been ergonomically designed for the best support with separately adjustable foot, back and head angles and they are available in three sizes and a choice of leathers and fabrics. Prices from £1,650. Lincoln have been traditionally made in the UK by craftsmen for over 45 years. Lincoln is a family-run manufacturer of handmade furniture and classic upholstery that can offer purchasers the unique opportunity to create the furniture of their choice and can be ordered in any fabric and made to measure if necessary. Each and every detail of this furniture is handmade from start to finish. Large sofa from £2,495. Merano are made locally by Collins and Hayes of Hastings, who have been successfully designing, developing and manufacturing upholstered furniture of the highest quality for over 130 years. This beautifully designed and crafted upholstery is individually handmade to meet the requirements of the customer. Medium sofa from £1,775. Kiss Elephant is a new range of bedroom furniture from British supplier Frank Hudson. This range is pictured in the famous Farrow and Ball colour Elephant’s Breath and is available in a selection of other Farrow and Ball colours. Farrow and Ball only issue a licence to companies who excel in the quality of their products, and strict processes have to be followed to ensure the paint is shown in its best light. Five-foot bedstead £1,269 and bedside chest £315. Calligaris is made in Italy and includes a range of stunning modern pieces of furniture for the kitchen and dining room. The contemporary classic tables and chairs are available in a dazzling range of finishes and colour options. Planet table from £450, Jam chair £119 and L’eau chair, £109.

Armstrong Recliner

Merano

David Salmon Furnishers South Street Eastbourne 01323 722 921 www.davidsalmon.co.uk www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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interiorstyle

Edwin Loxley Kitchen by HKS

THE DOWNTON EFFECT

The country house kitchen is so now

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hat is it about heritage and vintage that has us all hooked? Maybe it is the comfort of the traditional or perhaps we just all want a bit of Downton in our own homes. Whatever it is, the lure of the classic country house kitchen holds us spellbound. Panelled and painted units in soft shades of blues, greys and creams, Agas, dressers, plate racks and wooden worktops are, apparently, a few of our very favourite things in the kitchen. It is understandable. These classic country kitchens sit as comfortably in a swish contemporary house as a cottage or an elegant Georgian townhouse, influenced by the Victorian scullery and the esoteric Arts & Crafts movement. Pick from the timeless Milton kitchen from The Kitchen People with timber framed doors available in a variety of colours – for contrast pair up dark charcoal with soft alabaster. Or what about the Inframe Shaker Kitchen, also from The Kitchen People, that combines

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classic style with contemporary curves painted in the softest shade of feathers? Kitchens Bespoke installed solid ash kitchen units painted in chalk into an old convent in East Grinstead – it looks very effective as the kitchen perfectly complements the historic building while adding a contemporary twist with the Elica hood and LED mood lighting. The dresser makes a welcome return in Inspired by Home’s timeless Shakerstyle Edmonton range which is versatile enough to look edgy in a traditional home or a contemporary setting. While the New England Range, exclusive to Inspired Home Interiors, has a simple, clean look and gives the kitchen a light and modern feel while retaining that classic in-frame design. The Edwin Loxley Kitchen by HKS is very Arts & Crafts with its fine detailing and grand proportions – a stunning statement in a Victorian or Edwardian country home. Can you feel a Downton moment coming on?

Edmonton dresser by Inspired Home Interiors

Chichester Kitchen by Neptune Interiors


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interiorstyle

Inframe Shaker Kitchen by The Kitchen People

The Chichester Kitchen from Neptune Design Centre is the company’s original kitchen and combines traditional detailing and elegant craftsmanship to look stylish in a rustic farmhouse or a contemporary space. The soft handpainted finish comes in a choice of 28 colours. The Suffolk Kitchen by Neptune Design Centre is a new addition inspired by a series of old English antique chairs which were produced in a few workshops in Suffolk between 1790 and 1840. Earlier this year the company launched a collection of sideboards, dressers and occasional furniture, and they have now added the Suffolk Kitchen. The concept follows the classic Shaker look of pared back simplicity and perfect proportions with the exterior hand-finished in dove grey with the interior in honed slate and soft toned ash for the shelving and drawer boxes.

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Chalk-painted kitchen from Kitchens Bespoke

New England Kitchen by Inspired Home Interiors

HKS Eastbourne 01323 639446, Haywards Heath 01444 452222, Heathfield 01435 865599, St Leonard’son-Sea 01424 443464 www.hks-uk.com Inspired Home Interiors Eastbourne 01323 458165 www.inspiredhomeinteriors.co.uk Kitchens Bespoke, East Grinstead 01323 313133 www.kitchensbespoke.co.uk Neptune Design Centre Hailsham 01323 849483 www.neptunehailsham.com The Kitchen People Lindfield 01444 484868 www. kitchenpeople.co.uk


Milton Kitchen by The Kitchen People

The Kitchen Specialists that you can trust

The Kitchen People www.kitchenpeople.co.uk 61 The High Street, Lindfield West Sussex, RH16 2HN

Tel: 01444 484 868 Email: paul@kitchenpeople.co.uk www.facebook.com/kitchenpeople Suffolk Kitchen by Neptune Interiors

@KitchenPsarah


interiorstyle

wet, wet wet

design will usually achieve this - sometimes by the clever use of bespoke glass panels. Wet room systems with bespoke made to measure glass can also get around the problem of sloping walls, however ceiling heights need to be watched to ensure sufficient head height under the shower rose. Glass can be supplied with anti-plaque treatment - a musthave extra as it not only reduces the amount of cleaning required, but extends the longevity of the product. Another option recently available is tinted glass in various colours. Chrome is currently the most popular finish for shower and bathroom fittings, but if you want something a little different then finishes such as stainless steel, brushed nickel or antique gold can be used to great effect. Finally, if you live in a hard water area do consider the installation of a water softener and specify “rub it clean” nodules on the shower head to prevent the build-up of limescale. Ripples, Keymer Road, Hassocks, 01273 841228 www.ripples.ltd.uk

Showers are about experience as much as functionality – here’s an essential guide

T

oday, showering has become much more about an experience rather than pure functionality. If you’re planning for a shower or wet room key issues need to be addressed including drainage, water pressure, ceiling height and ventilation, but then it’s up to you. Everyone has their own view on what makes the perfect showering zone, but generally most want easy clean options, ample space, thermostatically controlled water temperature and a choice of spray such as overhead drench or rainshowers. Rainshower heads are ideal for wet rooms as the water flows vertically and limits the amount of splashing, but for true extravagance a ceiling flush module mimicking natural rainfall provides the ultimate showering experience. People often make the mistake of assuming that a wet room can be achieved in small areas simply by putting a showerhead into a room, but this is not the case as water spray needs to be controlled, even in a wet room. The aesthetics of a wet room often clash with practicality. For example in small rooms, shower spray exiting the shower area needs to be directed away from basins and lavatories. Good

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Style, design & innovation in tiles & bathrooms Come in and see the refitted showroom with bathroom and tile settings. Most of the range is in stock and to be taken away

Eurotiles & Stone Rustington, Unit F, Brookside Avenue, Brookside Industrial Estate, Rustington BN16 3LF Tel: 01903 785226 email: rustington@eurotilesandbathrooms.com website: www.eurotilesandbathrooms.com Branches also in Braintree, Stevenage and Twickenham

N ow ba th st ro om ock s a ing co sw lle a ra el an cti ng la o d n s m ou e o of os f rh til ai es u ge cs

or delivered locally for free.


summerstyle

TAKE A SEAT

The best seat in the house is in the garden when home life spills out onto the lawn; make yourself comfortable, says Norman Miller

Brightly coloured Santos chairs from John Lewis

A

ccording to the calendar, as you read this bees should be buzzing contentedly amid sunlit blooms. And how better to enjoy this bucolic scene than slouched in some stylish outdoor furniture? As people seek to improve their homes, gardens are an increasing focus of attention. 2013 research from Lloyds TSB found homeowners spending an average of nearly £900 every year turning gardens into chic havens, which tots up into a multibillion pound business nationwide. Rather than plunk a couple of old deckchairs on the patio/lawn, cut an al fresco dash with anything from deep sofas to day-beds. Materials include teak, aluminium, steel, rattan or textile-based stuff with names like resinweave. You can pay anything from £50 to four figures. Take a big-andbold contemporary metal table like Bridgman’s triangular graphite-glassed top beauty; around a grand for the table, then double it for half-a-dozen matching Vivre metal chairs. Or stretch out on a day-bed like La Source’s

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Bisham, a clever circular number that opens up to create four sofas and a coffee table. La Source also have Pacific modular alfresco seating units in a range of colours with comfy cushions included. Familiar high street names are in on the act, too, such as John Lewis – their brightly-coloured Santos recycled plastic chairs stand out, maybe matched with the chunky Java teak dining table. Metal fans might be tempted by Oxley’s sturdy British-made single-cast items (no bolts or other twiddly bits) ranging from beautiful filigree tables to curvy contemporary sofas in a choice of 16 colours to prove metal needn’t be dull. They have a Sussex outlet, too, Capital Garden Products. Many garden furniture offerings boast of being maintenance free but if any TLC is required it isn’t much. A couple of times a year, wash with a weak solution of detergent and water, rinse with clear, then dry thoroughly. To protect metal frames against salt air apply a little fine, clear car wax.

Bisham day bed from La Source

Finally, consider the joys of a firepit (from about £50). Not only do these provide warmth and a wonderful focal point for an evening sundowner or three but they also extend outdoor time into the cooler days of autumn. Pimm’s, anyone? Bridgman 0208 804 7474 www.bridgman.co.uk Capital Garden Products 01580 201092 Ticehurst www.captial-garden.com John Lewis 0845 604 9049 www.johnlewis.com La Source 01403 218686 Horsham www.lasourcedesign.com Oxleys 01386 840466, www.oxleys.com


Taking Care of your Design in the Home & Outside

u English Made to Measure Sofas and Chairs u Unique Selection of Contemporary European Furniture & Accessories u Italian Leather Sofas u Outdoor Furniture u Mirrors & Lighting u Full Interior Design Service u Full Landscape Design Service

3 East Street, Horsham l Tel: 01403 218686 l www.lasourcedesign.com Follow us on Twitter @chrislasource and Facebook - La Source


interiorstyle

SKIP STYLE

Next (www.next.co.uk) do a lovely table lamp made from teapots, Dunelm Mill (www.dunelm-mill.com) have coffee tables made to look like old shipping containers and even good old Transport for London are keeping up with the trend and selling off luggage racks and other items from the London Underground (www.ltmuseumshop. co.uk) You don’t have to get your hands dirty to upcycle and stay on trend just think outside the box a little. The old school gym bars in the picture make wonderful shoe racks (www.rochesters. uk.com) and the Top Hat pendant lights from Rockett St George (www. rockettstgeorge.co.uk) have a real sense of humour about them.

I

recently visited a friend who had just moved into a new house. Always one for a snoop I headed over to see what she had done to the place and as I walked through the front door I was immediately struck by how much she had achieved in such a short period of time even down to the coat rack and door knobs. Over a coffee my friend confessed she had decorated her entire house for £943.76. “I don’t believe you,” I said, “How?” It was that day that I learnt all about skip diving and I have been fascinated ever since.

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The Fabric Lady, Laura Jandac, says the next big look is Upcycling

art of using one item for a very different use than the one initially intended. This is a look that is mainstream and readily available on the high street, it is not necessary to skip dive unless the feeling takes you.

August 2013

www.sussexstyle.co.uk

Skip diving is the practice of sifting through commercial or residential waste to find items that have been discarded by their owners, but that may prove useful to the skip diver. It turns out that all across the country perfectly well-to-do adults are rummaging through other people’s rubbish in the hope of finding a gem. The process is endorsed by Kirstie Allsopp who has a programme on channel 4 on just this subject. When looking at the trends for 2013 and into next year gone is the shabby chic; it is all about up-cycling and the

Whether you are more comfortable on the high street or wading through car boot sales and auctions this is a trend that is here to stay and one that is achievable on every budget. And if you’re not sure how to go about it, or are having trouble sourcing a product or have a design-related question, get in touch. The Fabric Lady The Upholsterer Midhurst 01730 810284 www.theupholsterermidhurst.co.uk


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Fine Furnishings,Unit 5 Lindfield Enterprise Park, Lewes Road, Lindfield, West Sussex RH16 2LX Tel: 01444 482011 Email: info@finesofas.co.uk


propertystyle

PAST PERFECT

Orchard Gate combines Victorian elegance with 21st century comfort

T

he Legacy Collection at Orchard Gate, Shoreham-bySea, comprises the restoration and refurbishment of historic buildings by award-winning property developer Crest Nicholson. Orchard Gate’s East Lodge, West Lodge and Refectory were originally built in 1901

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and have been thoughtfully restored by Crest Nicholson to retain all their original charm and character while being given a 21st century makeover. The one, two and three bedroom luxury apartments, duplexes and cottages come fully equipped with a

contemporary kitchen featuring Bosch appliances and co-ordinating granite worktops. The luxury bathrooms, designed by Villeroy and Boch, are elegantly finished with Roman glass bath screens, Porcelenosa ceramic tiles and Chrome Hansgrophe mixer taps. The properties also feature oak panelled


SUSSEX STYLE doors and energy saving gadgets including low energy downlighters. Since they were launched earlier this year the properties have been extremely popular with purchasers and there are just a few properties remaining. Christine Tiernan, Sales and Marketing Director for Crest Nicholson South, said: “These beautiful refurbished apartments and cottages are a delightful combination of old and new bringing together these unique, historic buildings with all the comforts of modern, affordable living.” The remaining cottage and one and two bedroom apartments at Orchard Gate are only a short walk to the beach and the popular Holmbush shopping centre. Brighton is only a 20 minute drive away and the local town centre offers a good range of shops, bars and restaurants. Shoreham Mainline Station is close by – with direct services to London Victoria in just over an hour. The final one-bedroom duplex apartment in East Lodge is available for £194,950. The remaining threebedroom terraced cottage in West Lodge is £374,950, while the onebedroom apartments in the Old Refectory start from £184,950 and from £274,950 for a two-bedroom duplex apartment. Orchard Gate, Shoreham by Sea 0870 752 4384 www.crestnicholson.com/orchardgate www.sussexstyle.co.uk

August 2013

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highstyle

life by the ocean wave

Grand Ocean, a luxury art deco development, has joined the Pavilion in a tour of Brighton’s architectural landmarks

G

rand Ocean, the restored art deco landmark now converted to luxury apartments, has joined a list of illustrious buildings included in a new tour of the architectural highlights of Brighton. The development, formerly the Grand Hotel overlooking the sea at Saltdean, has been chosen as the starting point of the tour which leads visitors on an architectural journey of the city taking in Kemp Town, the extravagant Pavilion, the famous pier and the Grand Hotel. Ever since John Nash built the Prince Regent his extravagant Pavilion,

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Brighton has attracted architects seeking to push the boundaries of their craft and never was this more so in the 1920s and 1930s with the advent of art deco. The expression of this style was to find a particular home at Saltdean on the eastern fringes of the city with the building of the Grand Hotel and the Saltdean Lido by RWH Jones in 1938. For much of its history the Grand Ocean site has been a landmark destination. Built as one of the most spectacular hotels on the south coast, the site was blessed with beautiful gardens, a magnificent ballroom and roof sundecks that attracted the in-crowd for a weekend by the sea. Today the

apartments have a similar appeal with many being sold as weekend and holiday bolt holes for those yearning for that unique combination of the cleansing sea air and the vibrancy of a Brighton weekend Grand Ocean is simply one of the finest coastal developments in the UK. The development offers a range of luxury one and two bedroom apartments along with a very few penthouse apartments which, with their huge wrap-around terraces and 29ft long living rooms offering wonderful sea views, simply take the breath away.


SUSSEX STYLE

Internally the apartments achieve the perfect balance of contemporary style that pays tribute to heritage but delivers the very best of modern convenience with the latest kitchens and bathroom designs and oak finishes to all internal doors. Grand Ocean has recently unveiled three large statues by leading local artist Jon Mills, created to celebrate the completion of the development. The iconic Grand Ocean building was one of the country’s leading hotels in its art deco heyday of the 1930s. In the ‘50s it became the first ever Butlin’s resort hotel before falling into disrepair.

The three specially commissioned metal sculptures that now adorn the Grand Ocean building are entitled Stepping Up and evoke both the dancing heritage of the building and the new life breathed into it by the Explore Living restoration. The artwork consists of two pairs of larger-than-life couples dancing around two musicians and makes a significant visual reference to the art deco style of the 1930s.

As Grand Ocean is located just outside the city centre, prices are perhaps a surprise, you get that much more for your money, with a two-bedroom apartment starting from just £299,995 while the breathtaking penthouses are on the market for just a little over £500,000.

Mills says: “As silhouettes the figures display a ‘snapshot’ quality reminiscent of shadows or memories of the hotel’s ballroom, while also reflecting the spirit of leisure and the ‘good times’ of the Butlins’ years.”

Information on the architectural tour of Brighton www.visitbrighton.com

Further details Explore Living 0845 973 9054 www.exploreliving.co.uk

www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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housestyle

LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION At Crosshaven there’s no need to compromise

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SUSSEX STYLE

T

oo often house buying is about compromise on either location or property. It’s a tough decision… But at Rydon Homes’s Crosshaven development in Lewes such decisions are made easy by offering both a desirable location and a quality home in one perfect package. Lewes is a Sussex gem, a lively, picturesque town that is ideally positioned for the cosmopolitan town of Brighton and yet just minutes from the South Downs National Park. While Crosshaven itself is set high on a vantage point looking out over the town with vistas across the chimneypots to the rolling hills beyond. This well-planned, picturesque development is ideal for families at it also benefits from easy access to the excellent local primary school. It has been so popular that there are only three stunning three-bedroom townhouses remaining. The homes are ready to move into so purchasers can look forward to spending autumn in their new home. Mike Hudson from Clifford Dann explains: “There has been no better time to buy as the property market is showing real signs of improvement and new homes like these have a tendency to hold their value, too, as people are attracted to the maintenance-free lifestyle they offer.

“Rydon is offering a helping hand with Stamp Duty Paid [subject to status], making the prospect of these homes even more tempting.” The homes themselves are highly specified with fully-fitted designer kitchens incorporating integrated appliances including a double oven, dishwasher and washing machine, while the bathrooms feature contemporary suites from Roca and thermostatic Hansgrohe showers. The homes are also designed to be highly energy-efficient to help keep fuel bills low. James Chase, production director of Rydon Homes, says: “Crosshaven’s sales success is because it has ticked so many boxes for new homeowners. It is also quite unusual in Lewes to see a new build come on the open market and with just seven within the development it gives a real feel of exclusivity. “Buyers have commented on the excellent specification for the price. Take the quality kitchen appliances – we’ve integrated many of these already, meaning one less thing to worry about and giving a much cleaner finish. There’s also ample outdoor space, with each home having access to both parking and a private garage.” Just move in and enjoy. Crosshaven, Lewes Townhouses from £389,950 Clifford Dann, 01273 477022 www.rydonhomes.co.uk

www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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tastestyle

SCOFF & STUFF Treat yourself – Sussex Style’s Foodie Sam Bilton suggests…

Name Your Poison This month I ‘ve been finding out all about the cocktail and its growing popularity “Cocktails capture people’s imagination as they are a break from the norm. You can be a super spy or a beach bum all in one evening,” explains Myles Cunliffe of the Brighton based Mixology Group. I can’t say I’ve felt like either whenever I’ve drunk a cocktail. They’ve always seemed either strong enough to fell an elephant or saccharine, crassly overdressed concoctions more befitting of Del Boy than 007. Then earlier this year I was persuaded to try a green tea and candy floss martini. It sounds vile doesn’t it? But it tasted divine. Since then I’ve come to realise

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that real skill lies behind creating a good cocktail. “Making good drinks is all about tailoring the drink to the guest in front of you,” says Myles. “Almost all meat eaters enjoy a steak, but we all like to eat it differently. It’s the same for cocktails. Everyone is different.” The consumers taste for cocktails has changed considerably since they made their first appearance at the end of the 18th century. Initially they were very sweet but gradually they became dryer and more sophisticated. “In the past cocktails were made with ingredients you could source locally,” explained Rafal ‘Dragon’ Tetich, Head Bar Tender of Merkaba at My Hotel

in Brighton. “Then in the 1980s and 1990s, as cocktails became really popular, everything was replaced with artificial flavours and soda. These days we are returning to local sourcing and use the best quality produce.” This is good news for Sarah Thompson, Owner of the Lurgashall Winery. Blackdown Cellar, their new range of vodka, gin and vermouth (the only spirits produced in Sussex) was officially launched at the end of July 2013. “A great cocktail is a combination of flavour, individuality and presentation,” says Sarah. “If you are using quality ingredients you don’t need to mask the flavour of the spirits. Less is more and balance is key.”


Food Bites

Field and Forest Lindfield One of my favourite smells is freshly roasted coffee. There is something eminently delectable about that nutty, smokey aroma. Sometimes you catch a waft of it on Lindfield High Street. On these days I have an instant craving for a steaming flat white perhaps with a cantucci biscuit as a foil to the pleasingly bitter beverage. Luckily I can head to Field & Forest to satisfy this urge. Their coffee is robust with rich caramel notes and is specially prepared for them by Lindfield’s World Coffees, the sorcerer behind this magical smell. If cantucci is not your thing they have a host of homemade cakes and cookies on offer to tempt you. Be sure to check out the deli at the back of the shop before you leave. They also carry a great selection of local and continental cheeses.

Montezuma’s Sussex chocolatier Montezuma’s has added three new flavours to its chocolate bar range. Open Sesame is a milk chocolate bar bursting with crunchy caramelised sesame and sunflower seeds. Peeling Amorous features white chocolate with vanilla, cherry and lemon. Finally their new dark chocolate bar Charlie’s Luck is packed with peanuts and spiced with ginger and chilli. All three are available from Montezuma’s stores in Brighton and Chichester and online www.montezumas.co.uk

Field and Forest, High Street, Lindfield 01444 483700 www.fieldandforrest.com

This sentiment is echoed by Seb Cole, from Brighton’s Boho Gelato which holds frozen cocktail evenings the first Friday of each month at Slice in Hove. His creations have included Hendricks Slushy, cucumber and rose sorbet blitzed with a double shot of Hendricks gin, and Humbug, mint toffee gelato with brandy and creme de menthe. Seb will be using Blackdown Cellar spirits for a cocktail inspired by the Brighton and Hove Food Festival. Boho Gelato will be serving the cocktail at the Brighton Wine & Champagne event hosted by Hotel du Vin on 8 September. The Mixology Group will also be using Blackdown Cellar gin in their Mix Off competition during the Festival. Bartenders across Brighton have been invited to design cocktails inspired by

Sussex and based on three spirits and ideally with an amusing or interesting story attached. The general public will get the opportunity to tip their favourite bartender with special tokens at the Mix Off event. The bartender with the most tokens at the end of the night will be crowned Mix Off winner 2013. If you fancy unleashing your inner spy (or beach bum) there are several cocktail themed events you can attend during the Brighton and Hove Food and Drink Festival: • Evolution Of The Cocktail Masterclass, Merkaba, 10 September • Brighton Mix Off Cocktail Competition, SEA LIFE Centre, 12 September • Time for Tea (Cocktails!), Metrodeco, 13 September

SUSSEX STYLE

Coffee Break of the Month

Cobnuts Cobnut season officially begins on 20 August so you can expect to find plenty of these tasty morsels at farmers’ markets across Sussex soon. If you have a sweet tooth you may want to try Chocolate & Kentish Cobnut Fudge available from Potash Farm. You don’t even need to cross the county border to buy it. You can order online at www. kentishcobnuts.com with free delivery.

Food Festivals With summer drawing to a close Sussex is celebrating its bounty of local produce at a number of delicious food festivals. Which ones will you be visiting? Horsham’s Big Nibble 31 August - 1 September The two-day event launches the month-long Horsham District Food and Drink Festival, which will run from 31 August to 29 September. The weekend includes local produce markets, a beer trail and Horsham’s own Bake Off. www.bignibble.co.uk Hastings Seafood & Wine Festival 14 - 15 September Now in its 8th year, this is a celebration of Hastings’ sustainable fishery, its vineyards and local food producers. www.visit1066country.com Petworth Food & Wine Festival 21 - 22 September This year’s festival will see the launch of a Petworth Recipe Book containing recipes from local residents inspired by local produce or local traditions. There will also be a market, food demonstrations and a chance to discover the sights and smells of an historic kitchen at Petworth House. www.discoverpetworth.org

www.brightonfoodfestival.com www.sussexstyle.co.uk

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tastestyle

I always give the desserts a cursory glance before I choose my main and starter to see if there is anything that takes my fancy. On this occasion a chocolate and griotte cherry tart was beckoning to me like a sultry siren and it didn’t disappoint with plump cherries secreted in its chocolatey depths providing a contrasting tartness to the velvety richness. In order to indulge in such a sumptuous dessert I selected a main on the lighter side: silver mullet fillets with crab, bouillabaisse sauce and olive crushed potatoes. The soft fish fared better against the tasty paprika-laden sauce than the crab which was a little lost. The real triumph were the crushed potatoes, perfectly seasoned and slippery with fruity olive oil and studded with chunks of piquant green olives. The seasoning was also spot on for Billy’s lobster and crab risotto: bursting with seafood flavour although the rice could have had a little less bite.

LUNCH in EAST CHILTINGTON Foodie Sam Bilton checks out The Jolly Sportsman

W

e Brits seem to revel in the idea of a barbecue even though we can rarely rely on the weather. I’ve never really understood the appeal of the barbecue. I don’t particularly enjoy food covered in the bitter burnt residue of once flavoursome marinades. But when the weather is warm and sunny I do enjoy the relaxing nature of eating outside. It’s just a case of locating a suitable venue. The Jolly Sportsman is such a place. Nestled at the foot of the downs in the quiet hamlet of East Chiltington its vine-covered patio is ideal for a spot

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of al fresco dining. Folding glass doors allow the dining room to spill out onto the patio which is enclosed by a fern covered rockery lending it the feel of a secluded grotto. Beyond this there is a spacious landscaped garden dotted with wooden tables and benches. We nibbled on fat lemony olives and some very good home-baked bread while studying not one but three menus - à la carte, fixed price and a crab and lobster menu, with specials on the blackboard. Nobody could accuse The Jolly Sportsman of not offering enough choice.

My starter of Moroccan-spiced quail had flown too close to the barbecue coals; the perfume of the cumin could just about be detected though the singed skin. Whether it had been subjected to the barbecue or merely chargrilled the method of cooking for this diminutive bird seemed a little harsh rendering the flesh dry and chewy. It was almost salvaged by the zing of the minty tzaziki and the sweet and sour pomegranate molasses dressing adorning the clumsily assembled salad. Far more successful in appearance and flavour was Billy’s crisp beignets of soft goat’s cheese with chilli jam. On a fine sunny day you would be hard pushed to find a better outdoor dining space in this part of Sussex and the food and service is generally good. I can’t help feeling that if they focused on fewer items on the menu the food could be very good - even excellent. The Jolly Sportsman East Chiltington 01273 890400 www.thejollysportsman.com


SUSSEX STYLE

THE SECRET DINER VISITS

In search of the classic French bistro, Sussex Style Secret Diner lunches at Cote

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et’s eat outside and watch the world go by,” he said, steering me towards Cote on Horsham’s ‘restaurant row’, otherwise known as East Street. I didn’t mind one bit as we settled onto a semi-shaded table on the pavement. Looking inside told me all I needed to know - with its patterned tiled floor, globe lamps, marble top tables, cane café chairs and waiters in long black aprons, was this what I’ve been missing for so long - a classic Parisienne brasserie uprooted to Horsham?

Cote was new to me, but he had first discovered Cote in Brighton and been impressed. (A bit of research later revealed that the original Cote opened in Wimbledon to much enthusiasm from The Good Food Guide, and there are now three in Sussex with the third in Chichester.) Chains can dilute the original experience… Would I be disappointed? The a la carte menu looked promising, and then our waiter brought us the specials menu and the extraordinarily good value lunch and early evening menu (two courses for £9.95 or three for £11.90) and we couldn’t resist being cheapskates.Well the menu included rillettes for a starter and endive and roquefort salad for a main, so that was

me sorted. He raved about his golden glass of Brittany cider while I had a glass of sauvignon blanc that was as crisp and aromatic as an apple. Water was well presented in a stoneware bottle. My rich buttery rillettes came in a mini preserving jar to be thickly spread on slices of soft sourdough bread with cornichons (pickled gherkins) and leaves simply dressed in a good French dressing. He had a lovely herby artichoke, sweet tomatoes and soft goats’ cheese and olive salad. Portions were possibly smaller than the a la carte equivalents, but neither of us wanted a blow-out. For mains my salad was all crunch and punch – endives and walnuts with a generous amount of roquefort in a grainy mustard dressing. His salmon and haddock fishcake was dominated by the haddock, on a bed of spinach leaves and topped by a perfectly runny poached egg. Desserts? A small pot of really dark chocolate mousse for him and a really classic crème caramel for me – pale and custardy with a good burnt caramel topping.

few pennies more than £32, although a service charge of 12.5 per cent pushed it up past £36. We were asked if we wanted to pay the service charge. Well, how could we refuse? But I always wonder if the extra goes directly to the staff. And, if I’d left a cash tip, actually I’d have left more. Cote, East Street, Horsham 01403 273859 www.cote-restaurants.co.uk

ALSO TRY Artisan Patisserie, Market Square, Horsham 01403 274142 Charming café in historic building that’s great for brunches, lunches, coffee and cake. The Black Jug, North Street, Horsham 01403 253526 www.brunninandprice. co.uk/blackjug Recommended by Good Pub Guide and local residents and with an interesting a la carte menu and jazz and cider Sunday afternoon during August. SPILL THE BEANS… Which are your favourite restaurants and cafés in the area? Let us know…. We’d love to hear from you. Email: emma.piper@sandrpublishing.co.uk

He was happy and so was I, and we were still happy when the bill arrived, a www.sussexstyle.co.uk

August 2013

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drivestyle

LES VACANcES! All going on a summer holiday? Annie Oulton, Sussex Style’s Woman on Wheels wants to find a car for the long haul

A

t this time of year it is likely that you are about to pack up and set forth on the annual family holiday. In many cases, given the fact that this was booked in the depths of our recent, never-ending winter with no hope of a home-grown heatwave in sight, you may well be heading for the continent. You might possibly also have one or two excited offspring on board and an array of kit to keep everyone happy. If, like me, you decided this year to revive your long-lost appetite for outdoor activity and are going camping, then you will need a car to accommodate far more than your overnight bag, possibly even

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extending to towing a trailer or caravan! Uppermost in your thoughts may be the peace of mind you need that comes with knowing that your car will not let you down. The key to a happy family holiday is as often as not as much about the journey as the destination and the joy of being able to travel comfortably in your space. The idea of spending hours on end in close proximity to one another cooped up on a long arduous journey with a boot full of luggage is a test of individual stamina and collective bonding. If such holidays are a regular feature in your lives, carefully consider your choice of car.

Looking around the market I have discovered a car that appears to satisfy all these requirements. If you are lucky enough to be in possession of the 520d BMW 5 Series Touring you should not have a single qualm about anything that fortune or circumstance might throw at you in foreign climes. For a start you will have an unbelievably comfortable ride. There are several versions of the 520 BMW Touring but the eight-gear automatic diesel version has a surprisingly quiet engine and is well known for its fuel economy, doing 58.9 mpg with CO2 emissions as low as 127g/km. With acceleration in 10.1 seconds from 0-62 mph and a top speed of 144 mph, you will cruise along the autobahn like an ocean liner. Its


SUSSEX STYLE

quick and strong engine means that it easily outclasses its main competitors, the Audi A6 and the Mercedes E-Class, and makes the long journey you may be making a lot more relaxing. Even when climbing up the mountain road several hours later you will find remarkably responsive handling, due to its extended wheel base and four variations on the Drive Dynamic Control – normal, comfort, sport and sport+, meaning that it is possible to forget you are driving an estate car altogether even if towing, when the self-levelling suspension kicks in. The interior of the cabin is the last word in plush design and comfort, and crucially you get 560 litres of bootspace to stow all the clobber. Each of the rear seats can be folded individually if necessary. The rear arm rest can be folded away, too, providing a slot for longer items such as a surf board or

fishing line. When packing or unpacking the rear window can be opened independently of the tailgate – useful when you just need to throw in a last overnight bag. If you have small people on board an extra 30 litres of space can be claimed by adjusting the rear seats through seven lockable settings.

the road with a maximum five star Euro NCAP crash rating, and comes with six airbags plus traction and stability control. Unlike the Audi A6 it does not come in a four-wheel drive version, so you may want to pay out for winter tyres if you are planning a flit to the slopes later in the year.

Keeping the troops happy when patience is fraying and not getting lost are elements that contribute to a successful trip. For starters a full length sun roof is an option. Perhaps more important is BMW’s information and entertainment interface: the upgraded iDrive System is now touch sensitive and provides all your journey information plus internet connectivity through its ConnectedDrive. An optional head-up display allowing you to view essential information such as speed and junction details from the Sat-Nav while still looking ahead is money well spent. ConnectedDrive also includes a stress-free parking assist package, with surround view camera and an extra zoom function for parking the caravan. There are google-centred maps and an SOS button triggers an emergency call in the event of a serious accident (transferring GPS data to pinpoint your vehicle’s location). This is, however, one of the safest cars on

The 5 Series Touring can be specified in SE trim or M Sport guise, depending on your requirement and the depth of your pockets, bringing individual features such as different aero-dynamics and specific suspension, as well as its own alloys, steering wheel and gear knob. But if you just want to get to your holiday destination in one piece, and be able to play happy families all the way, then you will have huge fun in the classic 520d version; a highly engineered, stylish and versatile estate, and choosing the right one will mean it is not too expensive to run. PS It has just won Top Car in the Practical Caravan Tow Car Awards! Chandlers Brighton BMW 01273 922186 www.chandlersbrightonbmw.co.uk

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coffeestyle

gadgets & gismos In search of the perfect cup of coffee

Tassimo Joy TAS43 by Bosch £129.99 www.tassimo.co.uk Neat unit available in red, white, black and purple. Choose from over 40 drinks from many famous brands such as Cadbury, Carte Noir and Costa, including latte macchiato, cappuccino and espresso… Simply place the T-DISC in the Tassimo and let the machine read the barcode to produce the perfect cup every time. Simple and easy to use one button operation.

3in1 DCM2X Coffee Machine by Dualit from £159.95 John Lewis www.johnlewis.com Dualit’s 3in1 coffee machine offers three options: the convenience of quick-fix NX capsules and ESE pods, decadent smooth streams of professional quality coffee, and Thermobloc heating technology for frothy, creamy cappuccinos.

Impressa Z9 by Jura from £2,195 Steamer Trading Brighton, Eastbourne, Horsham www.steamer.co.uk South Coast Coffee Worthing www.kendricks.co.uk This new machine from bean to cup specialists Jura features One Touch TFT technology to create speciality coffee at a touch of a button. The high-resolution colour display screen with user-friendly options allows coffee connoisseurs to select their ‘preferred-perk’ from an à la carte menu of six different coffees from espresso to latte macchiato. Fine foam technology guarantees perfect milk foam quality.

Accents Black Filter Coffee Maker by Morphy Richards £44.99 Beales Horsham, Worthing www.beales.co.uk Coffee maker with 12-cup capacity and programmable timer with easy to use LCD screen makes it easy to wake up to fresh filtered coffee.

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PrimaDonna XS by De’Longhi £995 John Lewis www.johnlewis.com This is the slimmest beanto-cup machine on the market and combines style, versatility and performance. Its patented Autocappuccino System will draw milk into the machine and dispense it as hot froth, giving you a great tasting cappuccino. This machine can be used with either coffee beans or ground coffee so you can prepare your beverage the way you like it.

Nespresso M190 CitiZ and Milk Coffee Machine by Magimix £199.95 John Lewis www.johnlewis.com Industrial design chic machine using easy to load Nespresso coffee capsules for great tasting, hassle-free espresso. There are automatic and programmable settings for cup size, plus a high pressure pump and thermoblock heating element for the optimum water temperature and pressure for serving the perfect espresso.


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opinionstyle

THE BACK PAGE

SEEING RED NOT GREEN

Daniel Raven talks politics

T

he party system of politics may have a lot to answer for, but one thing it’s very good at is saving us all time. We know in advance that a Labour politician is probably going to bang on about the health service and a Conservative will be more likely to tire us in relation to the economy, and this helps us not to bother listening to them all that much. By the same token, it’s common knowledge that someone who represents the Green Party will primarily be concerned with stuff like pollution, recycling and saving trees... Otherwise what would be the point of them, right? Brighton recently became the first town in British history to elect both a Green MP, Caroline Lucas, and a Greencontrolled council, led by Jason Kitcat. And here’s where the party political shorthand breaks down, because while Ms Lucas has proved herself to be a competent MP who does indeed take an interest in pollution, recycling and saving trees, Mr Kitcat is a bafflingly despotic dolt with seemingly no interest in anything but putting people’s backs up. In March of this year it emerged that Kitcat’s council were planning to cut down a 150-year-old tree (a super-rare Wheatley elm) in order to improve the roundabout at Seven Dials. The tree was eventually saved, but only after nearly two months of very public protest. No one could quite believe that a Green administration was even contemplating killing a rare tree in order to improve a road (least of all Caroline Lucas, who joined the protestors), but the best was yet to come. In June Brighton’s binmen were told that their pay was to be cut by up to

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£4,000, and the ensuing strike saw our pavements replete with refuse. No one could quite believe that a council whose primary concerns included proper waste management and protecting the environment could let this happen (least of all Caroline Lucas, who joined the picket line); the stench of hypocrisy was every bit as palpable as the stench of, you know, all that other stuff. Recycling rates are down, pollution is up (shoppers in North Street currently enjoy as much as three times the legal limit of toxic gas nitrogen dioxide) and 46 members of Kitcat’s own party have signed an open letter begging him to resign. What with all of this going on you could be forgiven for thinking that an actual Kit-Kat might stand more of a chance of taking office than Kitcat does of being re-elected – yet the great man himself recently announced he was feeling ‘optimistic that the 2015 elections will see a re-elected Green administration, continuing to deliver for all residents’. He’s wrong, of course: we’ll be shot of him in 2015, no question. But two years is a long time, especially in local politics (where even two minutes can feel like a bloody lifetime...). Who knows what he might turn his hand to over the coming months – blowing up the moon, perhaps? I, for one, would rather not know, which is why I’m adding my depressingly nasal voice to the growing chorus of people who feel it might be time for Mr Kitcat to (ahem) ‘have a break’. Daniel Raven is more freely available at www.danielraven.com

No one could quite believe that a Green administration was even contemplating killing a rare tree in order to improve a road


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