So Brighton & Hove

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BRIGHTON & HOVE

SO BR IG HTO N & HOV E

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PL TAKEASE E ME

I’M F REE !

BUSINESS CLASS

DRAGON JAMES CAAN GETS FIRED UP ABOUT LEAVING THE DEN

T HE M AGA Z I NE FO R LI FE A ND STYL E

Ha vana f rom C lassic C olon ial t o Ne w C o ol! We br in g yo u a n e w b r as s er ie, ba r an d late n igh t lo un ge in Ho ve.

MARATHON MEN WHY THEY’RE GOING THE EXTRA MILE

EDUCATION TIME

GRESHAM BLAKE PARTY PICTURES

O p e n ing 7t h Marc h 2011

BRIGHTON & HOVE RICHEST APARTMENTS REVEALED ISS UE 9

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FASHION DELIGHTS WITH DENIM

OUR GUIDE TO THE TOP LOCAL SCHOOLS

Havan a S p o on has a n e w lo ok, a n e w Fren c h c h ef, wi t h a n e w m en u th at b uild s on th e Havan a br an d wi th a glam o ro us m o d er n t w is t.

7 0 - 7 2 C hu rc h R o ad, Ho ve BN3 2F D w w w.h a v a n asp o o n .c o.u k 01273 651651

SEASONAL BLUES

MARCH 2011 SOBRIGHTONANDHOVE.CO.UK

LADY GAGA GLOBAL STAR OR JUST SMART PR?

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HAVANA

RESTAURANT & COCKTAIL BAR 32 D uke Street, Brighton

Te l e ph one 01273 773388

w w w. h a v a n a . u k . c o m

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Hello... What an issue we have for you! We’ve already brought you the Richest Roads (July), counted your votes for the Greatest Brightonian (October) and named the most influential people with our Power List (November). Now, as part of our ongoing drive to bring you the great exclusives, we reveal the Richest Apartments in Brighton and Hove; the hottest places with price tags to match. From the modern Visage building in Palmeira Avenue, Hove, to the charming Old Court House with its views of the Pavilion – how many can you name before checking our list of the top 25? Still on the home front, we take a look through the keyhole of some of the finest properties on the market with a total value of almost £5million. We also chat to Sussex crime writer Peter James, whose country pad in Beddingham is up for sale. So, if you’re looking to buy or are just browsing you can’t afford to miss Beautiful Sussex Homes, another exciting new section of the magazine. Choosing the right home is a big decision but no more than pickling the right school for your inquiring young minds. In fact it’s one of the most important decisions you’ll ever have to make. So, we invite you to Meet the Heads in our must-read education feature, designed to help you decide which of the local schools is the right place for your children. Ever wondered why Lady Gaga is omnipresent in the media these days? Well, we’ve the low-down on the controversial, headlining-grabbing pop sensation. Is it a raw talent or PR prowess? You decide. This month’s magazine also features some thoughts on how to wear denim this season; from jeans, to dresses to trainers and bags. Dragon James Caan turns up in our popular business section where we also find out how a West Sussex tornado exposed a perfect business opportunity for one man who found his purple cow. (You just have to read the story.) Plus, we take a table at the classy Windsor restaurant in the Hilton Brighton Metropole, and look under the bonnet of the £3 million Lancia Stratos.

So Brighton & Hove

Pour a coffee, sit back and relax... you deserve it!

MARCH 2011

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64

March InsIde your

RegulaRs

sOCIals

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THIS MONTH…

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THE LETTERS We hear about the plight of Bodhi the skate-boarding dog.

FeaTuRes

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THE NEWS

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sample Champagne and save the world, one watt at a time.

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Foodie disappointment, a new hotel and the healthiest school in Brighton.

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THE GOSSIP

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THE SECRET

Famous faces turn out to celebrate Gresham Blake’s tenth year as a top tailor.

GOING GAGA she’s omnipresent in the press, so what’s Lady Gaga’s secret? Pure talent or media prowess?

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BODY AND SOLE

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RICHEST APARTMENTS

Who’s the big Brighton celeb given the cold shoulder at the Gresham Blake bash?

How the promenade has changed beyond recognition over the years.

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WELL SUITED

FasHION 29

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MEET THE HEADS We talk to the heads of top local schools to help you decide which might best suit your child.

SEASONAL BLUES denim is everywhere but how should you wear it?

FOOD & DRINK 64

The stories of two people who have very special reasons to take part in the Brighton marathon.

We reveal the hot-spots with the most expensive apartments.

FASHION INSIDER Put a spring in your step with a pair of Pollini heels.

Cover image: James Caan courtesy of PA Feature File.

Issue…

ONE TO CHECK OUT We visit the Windsor restaurant in the Hilton Brighton Metropole for an evening of traditional sophistication.

IN BusINess 79

THE AGENDA Meet samantha Maxwell-reed, our Business Guest editor and Md of expand executive search.

MArCH 2011

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76 84

41 81

DON’T BANK ON EXTRA HOLIDAY

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Law firm Thomas Eggar on what the Royal wedding means.

82

FIND YOUR PURPLE COW Checkatrade founder Kevin Byrne on how to grow a multi-million pound business.

84 89 90 93

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BUSINESS INSIDER News from W Brufords, Simply the Best and the Martlets Hospice.

THE BAHBAS Winning at the Brighton and Hove Business Awards can change your life.

A REAL GEM We talk to jeweller Jeremy Hoye about his latest collection.

New kid on the block Alex Hunter tells us about starting his own PR company.

CULTURE

DRAGON GETS FIRED UP Entrepreneur James Caan on why he’s quit the Den.

CREATING A BUZZ

THE GALLERY

SUSSEX HOMES

41 MARKET VIEW: Property is bouncing back

A variety of artwork from J’adore Gallery adorns the wall of our virtual exhibition.

42 WRITER’S RETREAT:

ON STAGE

44 KEMPTOWN

Our pick of some of the performances heading for the City in March.

MOTORS 76

Beautiful

INTO THE STRATOSPHERE How one man spent £3m on building his dream car.

Novelist Peter James’ home £1.6m

WONDERLAND: Grade I apartment £595,000

48 PIAZZA PERFECT:

Holiday at home in this City-centre flat £337,500

50 GETTING IN CHARACTER: Seven bed Edwardian property £1.65m

52 NAUTICAL NICETY: Modern seafront apartment £535,000

MARCH 2011

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BRIGHTON & HOVE

BRIGHTON & HOVE

SO

Suite 7, Brighton Media Centre 15-17 Middle Street, Brighton BN1 1AL Tel: 01273 201 329 sobrightonandhove.co.uk Publishing Director Nick Moore nmoore@onemediauk.co.uk Editorial Director Richard Moore FRSA rmoore@onemediauk.co.uk Publication Manager Matthew Fox mfox@onemediauk.co.uk Deputy Editor Nancy Cremore ncremore@onemediauk.co.uk Senior Writer Dan Smith dsmith@onemediauk.co.uk

Experience fish therapy The popular natural pedicure method from Turkish spas, now available in Brighton • Foot massage • Body massage • Fish pedicure • Hot lava stone therapy • Indian head massage • Gift vouchers available

Account Manager Claire Goulding cgoulding@onemediauk.co.uk Account Manager Adrian Brandish abrandish@onemediauk.co.uk Head of Design Jodie Hulse jhulse@onemediauk.co.uk Designer Erica Price eprice@onemediauk.co.uk Publishing Assistant Phil Glover pglover@onemediauk.co.uk

Opening hours: Mon-Sat 10am-8pm Sunday 11am-6pm

01273 746888 www.asasespa.co.uk Unit 13, Hanningtons, 19 Brighton Place, Brighton BN1 1HJ appointments@asasespa.co.uk www.asasespa.co.uk

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Contributors Ambrose Harcourt Valerie Thacker Damian Cotton Rachael Woolston Debbie Attwood Simon King Follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/SoBrightonHove

one media Published by:

and creative uk ltd

All rights reserved. The views expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the publisher. The publisher cannot accept responsibility for any errors or omissions relating to advertising or editorial. The publisher reserves the right to change or amend any competitions or prizes offered. No part of this publication may be reproduced without prior written consent from the publisher. No responsibility is taken for unsolicited materials or the return of these materials whilst in transit.

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BRIGHTON & HOVE

Give...

The Martlets hospice provides invaluable care and support to people with life limiting illnesses, including cancer. This month we can help them by going along to one of their fund-raising events. On Saturday March 5 there’s a variety show at Hove Town Hall, with comedy, music and dance including ‘Bad Girls’ by the Brighton Theatre Group and ‘Oliver’ by the Spotlight Players. And on Sunday March 13 take part in Walk to Remember, a short sponsored walk suitable for all ages. See themartlets.org.uk for more details.

This month Clink …

Get yourself along to the Hotel du Vin on Sunday April 3 for a rather different sort of Sunday service... one with a bit of fizz! Last year held on Hove seafront, the Champagne and local sparkling wine festival is becoming a bit of a fixture in the City’s calendar. It’s a chance to learn more about your favourite tipple, try a Grande Marques or a local sparkling wine, take part in a tutored tasting, and buy champagne by the sample size (30ml) or glass. For more details see brightonvisitor.com

Drink…

Burns Night may be a distant memory (and, perhaps, a slightly hazy one) for all Scots and wannabe highlanders, but that doesn’t mean you should put away the whisky until next year. This £15,000 bottle of Dalmore EOS is as good a reason as any to relax with a dram in the evening. Aged for 59 years in sherry casks, this single malt is – as you might expect – rather special and just 20 hand blown decanters will be sold. We haven’t tasted it but are told ‘intense flavours of toffee and caramel, orange, golden syrup and cinnamon all then vie for attention on the palate.’ See thewhiskyexchange.com

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Rent…

Buried is a quite extraordinary film. Paul Conroy wakes up to find himself in a coffin, presumably buried alive. And that’s where we stay for the duration of the hour and a half film; in the dark with Paul, a mobile phone, a torch and a lighter. All contact with the outside world is facilitated through the mobile and we’re not even given flashbacks to help flesh out the narrative. The result is a claustrophobic, exhausting and tightly-wound, highly original film. Blu-ray £9.99 from HMV.

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THIS MONTH

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Discover …

Why is symmetry so important? Why do men talk but women gossip? How fast does sound travel in water? How is technology threatening medicine? All of these questions and more will be answered at the Brighton Science Festival which takes place at various locations including the University of Brighton, Brighton Town Hall and the Ropetackle in Shoreham. Running until March 6, this is an interactive, hands-on, fun approach to learning about science. From discussing science and reason in the pub to becoming a neuron for a day, there’s something here for all tastes and ages. See brightonscience.com for more details.

you should… Shop… Listen… The Rag Trade Pop Up sale is one of a kind in the UK. Don’t be fooled, though, this is not a jumble sale, but a place where much-cherished designer clothes go to find new owners. On at the Thistle Hotel, Brighton, on March 12 and 13, they stock labels such as Vivienne Westwood, Chloe and Alexander McQueen from as little as £5. If you want to have a go at selling, take your clothes along the week before, Rag Trade will do all the selling and give you 50% of the profit. See ragtradepopup.co.uk for more details.

Undoubtedly one of the most prolific bands of the past three decades, R.E.M are back with Collapse into Now – their 15th album. The twelve track record features performances from punk godmother Patti Smith, Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder and a number of other acts from the alternative US scene. Collapse showcases R.E.M’s full range of styles from atmospheric, slow numbers, to full tempo rock songs. The album is out on March 7, around £10 from Ape, Brighton.

Hold …

If only there was a bag which could protect you from evil spirits and hold your keys… oh wait, there is! These luxury leather handbags and clutches from Anupa are not only beautifully crafted and very pretty to look at, they also have a piece of tourmaline (said to protect the wearer from negative energy) stitched into the decorative beading. The brainchild of Anupa Horvil (Anupa is Sanskrit for ‘unique’) these bags were designed with both style and individuality in mind. Anupa plan to open their first UK store in Brighton soon, but for now you’ll have to visit anupa.net MARCH 2011

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Save…

Want to help save the planet (and your electricity bills)? If so, this ultra-stylish product could be for you. It’s called Wattson and not only does it look cool, it also tells you how much electricity your household is using in real time. Created by DIY Kyoto, The Wattson (like ‘what’s on’) displays your electrical usage in watts, but if you tilt it forwards it’ll switch to showing you in cold, hard-earned pound signs. The unit glows with under-lit LEDs, displaying a cool blue shade if you’re being thrifty and economical or an angry red when you’re melting icecaps. The range starts at £100 from diykyoto.com

Sweat …

If you’re feeling the first flutterings of fear at the thought of baring all on the beach this Summer, worry not. Up until the end of March, Hilton Brighton Metropole are waiving the joining fee to their exclusive LivingWell Health Club. This beachfront hotel has a personal training studio, heated indoor swimming pool, fully equipped gym, jacuzzi, steam room and sauna. Not to mention a spa area where you can indulge in a massage or facial. For more details see hilton.co.uk/brightonmet

Wear…

If your sparkle has faded throughout the Winter months, now’s the moment to bring it back in time for Spring. With floor-length dresses ruling the runway, this on-trend sequined embellished Airline dress is just the thing to bring some glamour to your wardrobe. And the best thing is, it’ll serve you well from now all the way through to Autumn. Made and available at theremedi.co.uk, £230.

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Read…

Re-released this month after a limited print last summer is Dave Eggers’ most recent novel, Zeitoun. This is the story of a real survivor of Hurricane Katrina, who stays behind to guard his home after his family evacuates the doomed city. In the days following Katrina, he ventures through flooded New Orleans in a canoe protecting neighbours’ property, feeding trapped animals and rescuing people. When armed officers arrive, Zeitoun expects assistance. He’s wrong and, at gun-point, is taken away, suspected of being a terrorist. An enthralling and suspense-filled read. RRP £8.99 Waterstones, Brighton.

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LETTERS

Sohtell us at you think...

o m ici ed sp i a et iat et ta od uid up m q ol st, s i d no cu um qu m r, or m ru nis t atu i c tru t ea ag lis di ui ar , t q em h res nihi el m nihi ven i te rest n u n et e v t ve d ec cte . E ag ra os m ue ita ate ga s m itio e rio ate liq as lupt it fu eni aut l cum catu ce um i u d x s q o ss s ne i t bu se ee um es d lore raes ulli uibu me a e i ari m c o ro , n iq ta m is in eni t h re sa N et v rer ptur m l cup en m cil pi a is o. to u pi isi iae us ci ati ab im is vol ipiT ratia t a eb qu im du c , n ci gn n au end tem tius . , s ven m veli t ma plig m a ear olo m u e m a h c l e u e m a u pre id ne m o in e re di ec sa sd or u ie o m olo ten dol imu sit ccus s d m it, bu mp ni axi od lest mq asp ut e s a a as eru v ri eri re om t m nim ve eru i tot am, or icte co nda diti m m f qu di ,v m m ur u ps a p e ae a o us re pli en tat an s rit ata pr n et iqui sint, el m occ tae t ex s es up pos accu . Ne o et seq n di po erit l t i o a o i m r pt t, t l a ut uo up au ori t v est nt rem tat tu ige t e rep lu es au m la q ol lit na ui t u et ssu tu lup rna il do um am que em rum m. D pe cus.L lig iliq . ari dus eo nia do is e cil m e o n c m , u e e r i e u t m ie ia od nis l s q ac iq co e d re ea st e l L e m i s r e to la s e ma te up u s a am era iti ni ita ol eq s m ge sti sa o. N qu u ua es m t a tqu ep ip ve eic ui d ons scii veli es uta us r lle essu r ab , to um, essim am q am i te r b u n s e u o i m m t ib n l c a pt c us . N qu r A ru tia seq ias tib ute n u t e o e a se ve e a s. r? Lo m au lor tu de qu m, qu es t es , in qu iae ol ol lup cab ons te mo up e n li ua ta ec t u bu . R us se ic s d rem s do il i m n cc ici de q i to mol io. E bori h om ga d ue re bu t a i o re ian dis nd t fu qui seq po esti nie mni parc peru en r o ac s a du aio pta at l m o e t im es s, rem e Eh ndae nim i cu sim is m olu lupt nt. en rror imu tiis oria sita que bor is si v m l , . u u i n e e a o e i a t n e t nv sq i a mi ut d a s ot s r se repr a do cim cor rcill o. C sun si ntii isqu ni is a aios sim it u m us tas . E ab res in tib rum ci du san is in , qu s m uas a s un a ar us im p ae as ni er t e lp ib n re u ci um ip b id rum ni seq m ex au nu or ia bo d q spi ever la ace e om ition i o lo is mi lab qu t a pi r a qu do elen e is cil Ist, ame et as etu nos pl uta eb m fi , t ? n d t s r te li a of r te im t e . id end au mn au at r di rciu re pta et as tat El iis t o m qu se re tem lu tis et, lup rat s, e ccu ad pta olo u mo pta as do Ce mu it a em ccu da d s, id git olu qu ero da i od os d t fa san s cu at fu s m n re ut r od is e ut e ciu pta opt as a e no m a pl ia a offi volu odi apit s, t nu qu am, ro cte is s libu uam N erfe sin dip s de mq ex ipis mo mu a ne et tius qua s m na nse dita co it a Id

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LETTER OF THE MONTH Sir, Thanks to the health and safety people, or should we say ‘police’, this country is going to the dogs quicker than you realise. I’m prompted to say this because of the story about the terrier called Bodhi being banned from skate boarding around the North Laine, a sight most of us found amusing. His owner though has been told the dog can only use the skateboard if he’s on a lead. The dog, that is. Unless we’re careful Brighton will Sir, Firstly, I just want to say to your readers, if you haven’t managed to make it to one of the Brighton Farm markets then it’s about time you did. I picked up a bunch of stuff for Valentine’s Day, plus some fantastic meat for a Saturday evening dinner party. Secondly, I must say a big thank you to all the stall holders for getting me out of a jam! Keep it up. Nigel Watson Kemptown Ed: Food for thought.

become just like 1,000’s of other UK towns, colourless and without character. Jean Groves Woodingdean

Ed: Let’s all vote for who we’d like to see muzzled!

we to look forward to a special naked issue soon? Maybe to celebrate Brighton’s controversial annual naked bike ride later this year? Angela Brewer Bevendean Ed: Strange what some people read into cover lines.

Sir, Reading reports of violence and unrest from other parts of the world makes you realise how lucky we are to live in Brighton where we have, for the most part, a multicultural, open and tolerant society. It might not be perfect but it’s something millions envy. Darren Wilton Via email

Sir, I read with interest your ‘Anne in wonderland’ article in February’s issue as I am quite the Anne Hathaway fan. Your cover line made reference to Anne ‘acting nude’ – reminding me of an earlier issue (July) with cover star Colin Firth and “Why he ditched Darcy and went naked”. This equates to 25% of your issues to date mentioning nudity, are

Ed: What a nice, timely reminder. Thank you.

Sir, I once more enjoyed your ‘Secret’ page at the back of your January issue (Royal Escape). Has the idea been mooted to bind these up as a small alternative history book to Brighton? Perhaps when you’ve got 20 or so stories?

Katie Green Via email Ed: Where do we send your commission?

Sir, Thank you for the write up in February’s So magazine about the beer festival. Also the article about the Kemp Town brewery and the old breweries of Brighton was most interesting. Hopefully there will be a record attendance this year at the festival (March 10-12). Articles such as yours help promote real ales and cider and bring them to the attention of a wider audience. Peter Mitchell Sussex Beer & Cider Festival Ed: And there you go, we’ve just given the CAMRA event another most deserving plug. Cheers! We accept Letters to the Editor by e-mail: rmoore@onemediauk.co.uk or post to So Brighton & Hove, Suite 7, Brighton Media Centre, 15-17 Middle Street, Brighton BN1 1AL. Letters must carry full names and contact details. Letters may be edited for publication. MARCH 2011

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NEWS

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And now for

the news… OUR MONTHLY LOOK AT SOME OF THE STORIES MAKING THE HEADLINES BUILDING BOOM

Brighton and Hove is building more houses than expected, despite the recession. Reports show that during 2009/10 the City erected 380 additional homes, 48 more than projected. Although the numbers are lower than previous years, the average for the last five years remains at 601 - exceeding the previous government’s South East Plan target of 570 units annually.

SHINING LIGHT

The Brighton Half Marathon saw a 20% rise in applicants for the fifth year running and this year looks set to raise at least £70,000. A new flatter, faster route was announced for the 2011 race, taking in many iconic sights. The event is also perfectly suited as a warm-up race for all the major Spring full marathons and, of course, the Brighton marathon in April.This may explain why approximately 8,000 runners took part in the race last month.

The good news is that all of the new properties were built on brownfield sites. They include 100 affordable homes aimed at local people, either for rent or shared ownership - combining rent and a mortgage.

TIDE OF CHANGE

The long-term redevelopment of Shoreham harbour is back on track. The new focus of the initiative (between Brighton & Hove, Adur and West Sussex County Councils plus the Shoreham Port Authority) is on employmentled regeneration. They’re hoping to provide 2,400 new jobs and up to 2,000 new homes over the next 15-20 years.

Now in its 21st year, the Brighton Half Marathon is organised by the Sussex Beacon, a clinical care centre for men and women living with HIV based in Brighton.

ICY RECEPTION

The derelict ice rink in Queens Square, which has been empty for nearly eight years, has been sold to the Light Boutique ApartHotel chain. Despite several facebook groups calling for another rink to be built, the developers are planning a six storey hotel with 60 self-catering apartments and a restaurant.

Peter Davies, Development Director at Shoreham Port Authority says: “We welcome the emphasis on employment-led regeneration and fully support the shared vision for the area.” PHOTO CARMEL KING

GREEN SHOOTS

But it’s not only ice-skating fans who are dismayed. Some hoteliers are unhappy about the increased competition they may face. However, Clive Lynton, The Light's Managing Partner says: "We want to do something that we can all feel is right for the site and will be an asset. We will work with the community to get the best out of this site."

Hertford Infant and Nursery School has been named by digital channel Teachers TV as ‘the healthiest school in Brighton’. The Hertford Road school is linked to the Brighton Permaculture Trust to run initiatives such as a vegetable garden and juicing days.

The developers are expected to submit a planning application within six months following more community consultation.

Judge and ITN presenter, Charlotte Hume, says: “Their ideas are imaginative and forward thinking – a great investment for the school community in healthy living.” The school also won its second Green Flag in October last year. Headteacher Marcelo Staricoff says: “There is a real enthusiasm to keep the momentum going with both established and new initiatives, all underpinned by our eco-Code.”

Earlier plans for the area looked at the potential for up to 10,000 homes. This would have involved reclaiming land from the sea and the relocation of some of the port operations. This was not considered deliverable in the current economic climate.

GRUBBING AROUND

More than 200 food and drink producers gathered for the Sussex Food and Drink Awards although foodies from the City missed out when they failed to pick up a single honour. Eight of Sussex’s top producers received trophies at the ceremony held at the East Sussex National Golf Resort and Spa near Uckfield. Amongst the winners were the Curlew Restaurant in Bodiam which has also just received the accolade of a Michelin star. The closest Brighton and Hove came was runner up, in the form of Simon Duncan from Sam's of Brighton, who came second for the Sussex Young Chef of the Year award. MARCH 2011

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BRIGHTON & HOVE

MEDIA RELATIONS | EVENT MANAGEMENT PROMOTIONS | CAMPAIGNS

Need more business? Get more business Running an event? Get people there Not enough customers? Get more orders Fed up with the news? Get in the news! NEW! Start-up or SME? Get in touch today to find out about ‘Ignite’ - PR packages designed for you!

www.pavilionpr.com 01273 917541 ineedpr@pavilionpr.com

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CONFIDENTIAL

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L A I T N E CONFID AMBROSE

ATTENTION CAPES HIS ES G IN TH NO HARCOURT:

Which Brighton bu si is rubbing his ha nessman nds with glee? He so ld his business four ye ars ago at enormous profit an d since then has seen it go into administration tw ic a clever boy then e. Who’s !

Who was the Brighto n Councilor kicking up a fuss over a freebie? They were making it ver y clear that they were far from im pressed with the level of hosp itality offered to invited gues ts at the World Premiere of the new Holiday on Ice show , “Energia” at Brighton Centre. Sorry Councilor, it’s the age of auster ity. Which firm of soli citors in Brighton & Hove has set up an unusual in ce deal for their st ntive aff? They monitor the numb er of times that staff get th e name of the firm in th e local newspaper in a mo nt Apparently the ki h. ndly Editor has yet to what’s happening. realise No word yet on what the prize might be. We’ll let yo u as nothing escape know… s our attention!

R? ople.co.uk MOU U R epe in L z NTIA t@maga

FIDwEthrough mat CON us kno

hey dies that lunch (t la e th ill w n he W ntre ive hotel in the ce met at an exclus ussed sc di l their much of Brighton) fulfi ball g to become foot idea of volunteerin names ? We’re told their es re fe re t an st si as for ed to Sussex FA have been submitt e. atch this spac consideration. W b is ton Cele d h g i r B n he col ll know Which we er being given t rd reacting t e erh a upset af e was ov sked why she was h S ? r e should 0th when a lake’s 1 y badly extremel signer Gresham B ngineerium E e not at d ry Party at the t xxxxxxxx o a n s r s e a v w i n I n A s: “ r e h t .” Well, nd o l l g a them tellin a x x x x o s eft out invited, who’s feeling l , well now down the Top 20! g n i p p o r d

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Let

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WellSuit ed

SOCIAL

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BRIGHTON-BASED FASHION DESIGNER TO THE STARS GRESHAM BLAKE, CELEBRATED TEN YEARS IN THE INDUSTRY WITH A LAVISH PARTY AT THE HOVE ENGINEERIUM. THE 300 GUEST, INCLUDING MANY FAMOUS FACES, WERE ENTERTAINED BY DJ FATBOY SLIM AND DANCE ACT ORBITAL. CLIENTS OF THE BOND STREET CONTEMPORARY TAILOR INCLUDE CHRISTIAN SLATER, CHRIS EVANS AND DAVINA MCCALL. PHOTOGRAPHY MIKE MENDOZA

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Gaga

LADY GAGA

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orbes magazine estimates that Lady Gaga will make over $100million this year. That’s more than £62million. On top of that, she recently recorded a duet with Elton John, is being hounded by the rapper Snoop Dogg for a collaboration and Piers Morgan would prefer Gaga on his American TV show to the former queen of pop, Madonna.. And the accolades continue… she’s been ranked by Time magazine as being only marginally less influential than President Barack Obama, far more so than Republican politician Sarah Palin, and above Apple boss Steve Jobs. For a woman who turns 25 years old this month, her achievements are unprecedented. So, what exactly is all the fuss about? Well, the Poker Face singer, whose new album and single are called Born This Way, is certainly good at grabbing headlines. She also spends most of her time dressed solely in lingerie or

HEADLINE GRABBING LADY GAGA HAS BECOME MORE THAN JUST A POP STAR OVER THE PAST YEAR AND HER METEORIC RISE SHOWS NO SIGN OF SLOWING WITH THE RELEASE OF HER NEW ALBUM, BORN THIS WAY. BUT IS IT RAW TALENT OR PR PROWESS THAT’S CREATED THIS ECCENTRIC, PINT-SIZED MEDIA MACHINE?

making elaborate fashion statements (remember the dress made entirely of raw meat?) and her live performances are undeniably impressive, as well as bizarre. That’s without mentioning her product placement-filled music videos that are reviving the genre. But perhaps the most important part of the Gaga package is her carefully cultivated public image, that not only draws in devoted fans but also keeps the rest of us intrigued as to exactly who, or what, this twenty-something is. Born Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta, she grew up in New York with father Joseph, an internet entrepreneur, and her mother Cynthia – she enjoyed a relatively affluent childhood and attended strict catholic schools. A musical future was always expected and having played piano from the age of four, baby Gaga apparently wrote her first piano ballad at the age of 13.

words dAN sMITH

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Later, she dropped out of performing arts school to focus directly on her career and by 19 had produced and written a number of tracks. Before launching her own performing career, Gaga wrote for the likes of Britney Spears, New Kids on the Block and Fergie from Black Eyed Peas. The Gaga pseudonym allegedly came about when producer and cowriter (as well as former boyfriend) Rob Fusari sent Stefani a mistyped text including the title of one of her favourite songs, Queen’s Radio Gaga. The resulting message read ‘Lady Gaga’ and a new pop persona was born. Incredibly, the multi-award winning artist has made just two full-length studio albums, the most recent being Born This Way. Before this, The Fame, released in 2008, spawned the massive singles Just Dance, Poker Face and Paparazzi, selling some 12million copies. A year later came The Fame Monster EP, on limited release, adding another three million to the tally and bringing singles sales to some 51million. Gaga was also the first artist to rack up a billion music video views and recently received a Guinness World Record for the longest time spent in the singles top 75 – a whopping 154 weeks, that’s just short of three years. The figures are staggering; enough to make you think that she’d re-invented pop music. But the truth is quite the opposite – despite creating enjoyable, catchy tunes, Gaga’s brand of pop is far from revolutionary and draws on artists such as Madonna and the Pet Shop Boys as well as various other 80s acts. Rather than a unique sound, Gaga’s got a unique image and it’s the theatrics that are the attraction for many. Her fanbase is comprised of a vast range of followers including casual listeners, as well a hard-core of dedicated fans. Gaga refers to them as her ‘little monsters’ and they adore her. Her eccentric look and ‘anything goes’ acceptance to sexuality, style and opinion makes her a welcoming figure. Her fans feel close to her, because in a way, she’s an outsider to the mainstream herself, despite being the biggest act around. “I used [at school] to get made fun of for being either too provocative or eccentric, so I started to tone it down. I didn’t fit in and felt like a freak.” Gaga is a champion for those who don’t quite fit in. She’s a beacon of hope to people who feel like outsiders, from teenagers with confidence issues to kids struggling with their sexuality. In fact, she’s fast becoming the gay icon of the 21st Century. “Why are we still talking about ‘Don’t ask, don’t tell?’” she said when commenting on the US forces’ policy on gay service personnel. “It’s like what f***ing year is it? It makes me crazy.” The military stance has since been repealed, at least officially. And, bi-sexual herself, Gaga can perhaps claim to have influenced the change of tact, having spoken publicly at a rally in Maine in September. She’s quite happy to throw her weight behind worthy causes and is something of a philanthropist; a number of her concerts were dedicated to raising funds for Haiti in the wake of the 2010 earthquake. She’s also a strong supporter of the National Equality movement in the US.

But despite being hands-on in her support of causes close to her heart and consistently praising her ‘little monsters’ for

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their dedication, the Gaga brand is undoubtedly a stage show. Her entire being is a showbiz creation on par, almost, with Michael Jackson and we know little of her private relationships. She told Rolling Stone magazine: “If I were to ever, God forbid, get hurt onstage and my fans were screaming outside of the hospital, waiting for me to come out, I’d come out as Gaga.” In the same interview she admitted that it’s a front that’s got to be maintained at all times.

Lady Gaga in her own words: “You have to be unique, and different, and shine in your own way.” “Love is like a brick. You can build a house, or you can sink a dead body.” “And now, I’m just trying to change the world, one sequin at a time.” “I’m obsessively opposed to the typical.”

“When I wake up in the morning, I feel like any other insecure 24-year-old girl. Then I say, ‘Bitch, you’re Lady Gaga, you get up and walk that walk today.’” And she certainly does walk the walk, being ‘Lady Gaga’ rather than Stefani Germanotta every day. In fact, she’s an incredibly hard-working performer. Gaga kicked off her first international tour, The Fame Ball, in March 2009 and started her second, The Monster Ball, later that year. By late Spring this year, having almost continually been on the road, she will have performed 270 concerts. That works out as one every two to three days, for three years solid. Undoubtedly that level of touring is great for the bank balance and fanbase, but having her whole life as a performance has taken its toll. On numerous occasions reports have surfaced of her collapsing before and after gigs, additionally she’s also been harangued by drug allegations, and rumours of a mental breakdown are never far away. But again, that’s part of her appeal. She gives us the theatrics of a superstar, and yet we get glimmers of a fragile human – both physically and mentally. It’s all part of what keeps us hooked; great pop songs, headline grabbing outfits, a mystique that’s hard to pin-point and humanity that makes people feel like they belong. Lady Gaga is the celebrity with empathy, and a fascinating one at that. SO

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“Live your eyeliner, breathe your lipstick, and kill for each other” “Don’t you ever let a soul in the world tell you that you can’t be exactly who you are.” “People will always talk, so let’s give them something to talk about.” “A girl’s got to use what she’s given and I’m not going to make a guy drool the way a Britney video does. So I take it to extremes. I don’t say I dress sexily on stage - what I do is so extreme. It’s meant to make guys think: ‘I don’t know if this is sexy or just weird.” “I’ve always been famous, it’s just no one knew it yet.” “I would rather die than have my fans see me without a pair of heels on. And that’s show business.”

Lady Gaga in numbers: Age: 24 Height: 5ft 1” Albums: 2 Album sales: 15million Singles: 9

Single sales: 51million Music video views: 1billion Current net worth: $110million (£70million) Twitter followers: 7.9million

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DynamicYoga.tv with Stuart Tranter

Beginners to Advanced

YOU NEED YOU Class timetable Mon

Tues

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NEXT TO HOVE STATION • CLASSES ON EVERY DAY • £14 FOR 14 DAYS 01273 707777 • www.dynamicyoga.tv • info@dynamicyoga.tv Untitled-1 1

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New original works in stock Opening times Mon, Weds-Fri 10am - 5pm • Tuesday CLOSED Saturday 10am - 6pm• Sunday 11am - 5pm

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FA S H I O N

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STYLE WRITER DEBBIE ATTWOOD ON ALL THE LATEST NEWS AND VIEWS FROM THE WORLD OF FASHION

Time to Shine

If you want to wear your style on your sleeve, Versace has crafted the perfect time piece with this Ladies’ Chronograph Watch. The stunning model in PVD rose plating, features a multi-dial clock face in mother of pearl with combination hour markers, date function and chronograph. The Versace Chronograph Watch is available at watchshop.com £1,750.

Stepping Out Gold Glamour

Accessories are the key to success when it comes to adding glamour to your outfit and this ring from the latest Padani Safari Collection will certainly do that. Make sure you’ve had your manicure because this statement piece can only be on the most polished of fingers. 18k gold ring with diamonds and sapphires from padani.co.uk £5,850

Now available at ASOS come these popular Pollini heels. Cut-outs and block colour details are huge this season and what better way to show off your new pedicure? Pollini shoes at asos.com for £285.

Floral Fever Getting a Tan

Forget your Summer tan, the statement tan of the season is all in the bag. From biker boots to biker bags the trend in chains and studs is here to stay and this Aspinal of London Tan leather bag should be your Spring staple. Tan Biker Bag available at aspinaloflondon.com £675.

We’ve fallen for all things floral here at SO Towers and we suggest adding some flower power to your look this Spring. Who better to assist than the king of floral himself Erdem, with The Chiasa Dress. Team with pumps for an afternoon in the sun or add heels and chunky jewellery for a late dinner date. The Chiasa Dress by Erdem £828 available at matchesfashion.com

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Blues Seasonal

BRIGHTON & HOVE

WORDS DEBBIE ATTWOOD

Long Tall Sally sleeveless denim jacket

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Blouse £119, trousers £139, elegance.co.uk

enim has made an early comeback! The Spring/Summer catwalk shows were full of the blues – from skinny jeans to flares and shirts to bags, it’s everywhere this season.

No longer just the casual fall-back, denim is changing its appeal with new smart, chic pieces. It’s now chosen as the go-to item for an evening out or even a work gathering. So, whether you’re looking to revamp your whole wardrobe or just add a few select items, denim is the option for every occasion. If ever there was a time to get creative with your style it’s now! It’s all in the jeans Along with your little black dress, the perfect pair of jeans will always be a must-have wardrobe item. Why stop at one pair though? Now is the perfect time to add to your collection with straight-cut, skinnies and cropped – ready for the sunnier days. With enough of a selection you can wear your denim every day. Layering is the look for this season, so don’t be afraid to mix and match. You can even couple your denim with, well… more denim. It’s OK to do the double-denim style, so dig out that blue shirt and belt it up over some high-waisted skinnies, or better yet leave the double to the professionals and go for a readymade all-in-one.

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Denim shirt £129, Denim Trousers £139, elegance.co.uk

Denim bag £199, elegance.co.uk

Denim disco Night Fever is back and it’s time to boogie, with bootcuts and flares popping up all over the catwalks. The flattering flare is a great style for every shape. Pair them with your sparkly wedges to fully embrace the disco fever or try with some brogues for a Sunday stroll, if you want a more casual feel. ’70s fever has hit across the board with A-listers snapped in A-line skirts. Get down to the shops and once again embrace your inner hippie.

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FA S H I O N

Something for the boys It was not only the women gracing the runways in their denim best. Not to be outdone, the men showed off their Sunday best with everything from jackets to shoes in this season’s must-have fabric. Even denim suits are popping up, so act quickly gents, you don’t often get the opportunity to dress down whilst dressing up!

Playing dress up Denim days are extending to all items and if you want to dress to impress, do it in denim. With a range of colours, especially this season’s style choice of white, a summer dress is a perfect way to welcome in the warmer weather. Get ahead of the game and get your beach style all tied up. With heels or pumps this is the summer style not to be missed. SO

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Stella McCartney Fallabella bag £535, matchesfashion.com

Hudson Baby bootcuts £199, the-dressingroom.com

Stella McCartney skinny zip detail jeans £275, matchesfashion.com

Men’s Alexander McQueen Skinny Fit Jeans £235,matchesfashion.com Stella McCartney boot cut jeans £265, matchesfashion.com

Goldsign Misfit Jeans £270, donnaida.com

Dolce and Gabbana gold fit jeans £278, matchesfashion.com

Sportmax Code Tay Dress £278, matchesfashion.com

Stella McCartney denim button front dress £690, matchesfashion.com

Marc By Marc Jacobs jersey dress £235, matchesfashion.com

Denim jacket G Star Raw £173, houseoffraser.co.uk Lanvin leather & denim trainers £275, matchesfashion.com

Current/Elliot 3/4 Sleeve Snap Jacket in Pebble £275, the-dressingroom.com

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Top gear Forget investing in novelty Fitness kit, FitBitch Founder Rachael Woolston picks the most eFFective gear that will get results and keep you motivated...

running is a great way of getting fit and when you first start out you don’t need anything but a pair of running shoes. But as you progress, a training watch becomes invaluable as a way of keeping you motivated and challenged. there are thousands on the market and i’ve tested a lot but this is one of the best. why? Because of its accuracy and ease of use for non tech types although it has enough functions to appeal to the geeks amongst us too.

it has a large face so you can see your readouts clearly while running, and the heart rate function and gps is always spot on. plus, it uploads workouts wirelessly saving you time and hassle. it is pricey but it is a worthwhile investment for those who take their running seriously. sweatshop, Queens road Brighton also stock a range of garmin watches.

Best for a super strong core the Body pod, £34.99, body-pod.co.uk Forget the swiss Ball, if you want something that will isolate and target your core this is the best piece of kit. all of our boot camp graduates whisper about ‘the pod’ with equal parts dread and awe because it is an absolute killer but super effective. don’t believe me? according to a study by the university of chichester, the Body pod has been proved to recruit more muscle fibres than a swiss Ball.

Best for runners garmin Forerunner 410, from £299, garmin.co.uk

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Best for advanced functional training Freeform board, £215.84, physicalcompany.co.uk If you’re easily bored and need constant fitness challenges, try the Freeform board. I was introduced to this by an Australian fitness coach who uses it to train everyone from elite Aussie Rules football players to the general population, but it has only just arrived on UK shores. It is effectively a platform on wheels which allows you to condition muscles and joints on every plane of movement and target the core from 360degrees. It is great fun to use as a fitness game for the entire family but it really comes into its own when used as a conditioning tool for the already fit. It may sound simple but this builds a solid foundation for elite conditioning for anyone serious about their sport and fitness. We are currently one of the few fitness camps in the UK who use this kit in our camps.

Best for strength & flexibility

built up strength. Don’t just leap in without getting proper instruction and don’t opt for cheap plastic bells which won’t work properly.

Best for recovery Foam Rollers, £22.50 (size 15cm x 90cm) from physiosupplies.com Almost 90% of people who exercise neglect the repair and recovery part of their fitness routine. This is a big mistake because at the very least, it will stop you making fitness and aesthetic gains and at worse it will result in injury. It is why this piece of kit should be the one must-have piece of gear in everyone’s home fitness kit. Use it to relieve tight muscles and fascia and you can even use it for working your core. For our one hour workshop on foam rollers email fbfitness@aim.com

Best for pull ups V-Taper Shaper Sport +, £20, v-tapershaper.com Pull ups tend to be seen as something only men can do, but this piece of equipment helps everyone achieve one by helping you build strength with assistance until you can do it alone. Pull ups are a fantastic torso, tummy and arm shaper. Be gone bingo wings and flabby tummy!

TRX, from £152, escapefitness.com If you want to lengthen, strengthen and improve your flexibility, this all in one device which stands for total resistance exercise is second to none. It may look simple but the fact that it was originally used by America’s elite Navy SEALS will tell you all you need to know about how challenging this can be. With a central anchor point, you can either use the handles or the foot straps for a huge variety of exercises to build strength or increase flexibility. Use as a beginner and gradually adapt the exercises as you get stronger. This is a fantastic piece of kit and very popular with everyone in our camps from beginners onwards. It is a little pricey but there are now alternatives on the market including Ztrainer Suspension Fitness System, £69.99, ztrainer.co.uk.

Best for strength and conditioning Kettle bells from £16.34, amazon.co.uk Swing it, lift it, even throw it, kettle bells are amazingly versatile fitness tools which raise your heart rate while building strength. If you have only fifteen minutes a day to spend on fitness then an intensive set of exercises using this cannon ball shaped weight will get you sweating and feeling the ache. But don’t be tempted to invest in a bell that is too light. You build up strength quickly so you need one that will continue to challenge. My advice? Get a starter weight of around 8k/12k for women, 12/16k, for men. Then use this for single arms and buy a heavier weight when you have

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Simply affix to a climbing frame or try Hove Park’s pull up bars, put one knee in the strap and the resistance band helps take some of your weight so you can lift your body.

Best for fun fitness SpaceHopper, £12.60 for a giant hopper, amazon.co.uk OK, so this is not technically a piece of fitness equipment but we use them in our camps to great effect. SpaceHoppers get you sweating no matter how fit you are, and provide an all over body workout in a 100 metre bounce off. It also doubles up as a very effective Swiss Ball which can be used to help you stretch and strengthen. Try lifting weights while sitting on a spacehopper to force more muscles to be recruited to keep you stable. Or for a great thigh stretch, kneel and place one foot on the spacehopper and bring the other on the ground in front of you making sure your torso is erect. For more details about FitBitch Boot Camp, their workshops and Running Club visit: fitbitchbootcamp.com or call 07855 742 195

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SOME 20,000 PEOPLE ARE EXPECTED TO TAKE PART ON APRIL 10 IN THE BRIGHTON MARATHON. MANY WILL BE HELPING RAISE MILLIONS FOR CHARITY. SO, WHAT ABOUT THOSE WHO HAVE A PERSONAL REASON TO RUN? WE TALK TO TWO OF THEM... Peter Boddy: Multiple Sclerosis sufferer running for Eastbourne and South Wealden MS branch

Considering Peter has absolutely no sporting background at all, it comes as something of a surprise that he is trying a marathon. What does his family think of it? “Oh, they think I’m mad,” he says cheerfully. “I did a practice walk along Brighton seafront last week and it took me four hours to cover four miles so I reckon it will take me three days to do the marathon.” Peter saw the London marathon on television last year and decided it would be a good idea to raise funds for his local Eastbourne and South Wealden MS branch. “I’ve got no figure in mind, I’ll just raise what I can raise,” he says philosophically. He won’t be alone in his quest to complete the marathon on April 10. His wife and two teenage sons, Joseph (19) and Ryan (16) will accompany him as well as others from his local MS branch.

Five years ago Peter Boddy, 46, noticed that some of his fingers had gone numb. A week later his wife suggested he should go to the doctor’s to check it out, and it was then that he discovered he was suffering from the early stages of Multiple Sclerosis. “I was hale and hearty until then,” he says. “It’s my walking that has been affected so I shall be a bit slow doing the marathon.”

Peter was originally diagnosed with relapsing or remitting MS which means that the disease comes and goes. But that has now changed to progressive, relapsing MS. In October he started his latest course of chemotherapy - he has treatment every three months - but that had to be suspended when he fell ill from kidney disease and was admitted to hospital. Undaunted, he bounced back and was up to jogging on a treadmill when the disease set him back again and reduced him to walking with a stick. But Peter says he is “really, really determined to take part in the marathon”. He has already started fundraising, has printed some T-shirts and had business cards made. There are obstacles certainly, but there is no way a little matter of 26.2 miles is going to stop Peter Boddy.

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B R I G H T O N M A R AT H O N

Nigel Cook: Running for Sussex Air Ambulance

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Over the last 15 years, Nigel has run six marathons so he is no stranger to what is required. Now aged 52 he anticipates crossing the line in Madeira Drive in about 3hrs 40min. “I do a long run at weekends and three runs during the week,” he says. But he gets a good short-rep workout when he referees youth football games at home in Horsham: “At 16 years old they’re pretty fast,” he says. Neil, who has himself run a marathon in the past, is now on the mend, but is also grateful for the help he received: “If it wasn’t for the Air Ambulance, I would not have survived. “The doctors said I’m lucky to be alive. It’s amazing that I’m still here really and my wife and son have pulled me through. “The worst thing was not being able to give my son a proper cuddle. I couldn’t pick him up and hold him in the air like fathers do.”

It was a warm Sunday in April two years ago when disaster struck. Neil Akers and Kris Cook were riding to Brighton seafront to enjoy the Spring weather, but they never made it. Neil’s Suzuki collided with a van on Saddlescombe Road in Hove, leaving him fighting for his life. Kris, who is the son of Neil’s best friend Nigel Cook, stayed by his side until help arrived, and then raced home to tell his dad what had happened. Had it not been for the prompt actions of the Air Ambulance who reached the scene within minutes, Neil would not have survived. This is why Nigel has chosen to run the Brighton Marathon for the charity. “The Air Ambulance is close to my heart because it helped save the life of my friend,” says Nigel. “I always thought that this service was part of the emergency services paid for by Government but they are almost totally reliant upon fundraising.” Nigel visited the Sussex Air Ambulance base at Dunsfold Park in January and took part in the charity’s pre-marathon training run.

Bridget Pepper, East Sussex County Fundraiser for the air ambulance, tells us: “The Brighton Marathon is now our biggest running event and is really helping us towards raising the £1.7 million we need to keep the helicopter flying and saving lives across Sussex and Surrey. “It is so heart-warming to be there on the day and to see so many people running as a tribute to friends and families.” Neil is a commercial printer, and is pictured right with his son. He has now returned to work voluntarily twice a week and hopes to resume full-time duties in May. Background picture: Skye Brackpool Photography

brightonmarathon.co.uk

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CHAPEL RO AD

FISHERGA TE TERR ACE

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HOMES WRITER’S RETREAT HOME OF A BEST SELLING NOVELIST

GETTING IN CHARACTER EDWARDIAN CHARM WITH GATED DRIVE

SEAFRONT WONDERLAND BOLT HOLE THAT INSPIRED ALICE

Prestigious homes in:

BOUNCING BACK PROPERTY FLYING OUT THE DOOR

BRIGHTON | HOVE | ROEDEAN | KEMPTOWN | LEWES | ARUNDEL | WESTMESTON

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CHAPEL PLACE LIMITED

LAND AGENTS

NEW INSTRUCTION Tonbridge £250,000 Single plot with planning for a 4 bed house of approx. 1,900 sq ft

NEW INSTRUCTION

Woking – Offers Invited Site in sought after location with planning pending for a substantial detached house

NEW INSTRUCTION

Brookland – Offers Invited Site with planning permission for 2 x 4 and 2 x 3 bed detached houses

NEW INSTRUCTION

Hastings £150,000 Single building plot in desirable location close to South Downs National Park

NEW INSTRUCTION Hove £495,000 Single building plot with planning for a detached house of approx. 4,200 sq ft

NEW INSTRUCTION Keston Park – Offers Invited Site with planning permission pending for a substantial detached house

NEW INSTRUCTION

Maidstone £150,00-£175,000 Single plot with planning for a detached house of approx. 1,400 sq ft

NEW INSTRUCTION

Canterbury £495,000 Approx ¾ acres with planning pending for a substantial detached house

NEW INSTRUCTION

NEW INSTRUCTION

Lewes – Offers Invited STP Approx 0.45 acre of land with existing property for sale subject to planning

Eastbourne – Offers Invited Period property with planning permission to convert into six apartments

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Paddock Wood £125,000 Ground floor 2 bedroom flat in need of total refurbishment

Tunbridge Wells £195,000 2 bedroom flat in St James’ area with share of garden and freehold

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PROPERTY

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Flying out the THE PROPERTY MARKET MAY STILL BE DEPRESSED, BUT HERE IN BRIGHTON AND HOVE WE’RE BOUNCING BACK FROM THE WORST OF IT, AS VICTORIA ALDERTON FROM LOCAL ESTATE AGENT BARRIE ALDERTON EXPLAINS:

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t Barrie Alderton we noticed that prices fell during the second half of 2010. The standard two bedroom terrace terrace house in the Hanover area of Brighton before the crash was selling for between £270,000 and £275,000. Now we can’t achieve above about £250,000. However, the good news is that 2011 began with lots of activity from prospective buyers and properties are flying out of the door. Our other observation is that first time buyers are still very thin on the ground. What’s more, their average age is now approximately 38-years-old. Understandably, when buying for the first time later in life, they are more interested in family homes, so smaller semi-detached or terraced houses fit the bill better than the traditional one bedroom flat. The property market will always fall foul of the doom and gloom mongers and be subject to the ebb and flow of the economic tide. Government cut backs, however necessary, will also undoubtedly affect the market. With employment in the public sector looking insecure, many people who may have wanted to move might now wait and see.

With fewer properties coming onto the market in the first place, the over-valuing of properties can become a problem. I would urge all sellers to take into account the experience and qualifications of the agent they are dealing with and ask them to explain their reasoning and proof of the valuations. See if your agent is registered with associations such as the National Association of Estate Agents Licensing scheme, The Property Ombudsman, as well as local associations such as the BHEAA (Brighton and Hove Estate Agents Association). However, Brighton and Hove has always been unique when it comes to the property market. We are very lucky to live in such an interesting and sought-after City. We have the sea, the Downs, a vibrant cosmopolitan City with two worldrenowned universities and excellent rail and road links to London. We also have lots of property within a relatively small location which offers buyers and sellers a huge variety of choice. In other words the Brighton and Hove property market will most probably weather the storm reasonably well, unlike some other areas of the UK (according to the latest figures, property prices increased by 14.9% in Brighton and Hove between July to September 2010, compared to a decrease of 20.8% in Northern Ireland). And whilst that doesn’t mean that we should become complacent, it certainly seems like we’re escaping the worst of the property slumps for now. barriealderton.co.uk MARCH 2011

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Sunday TimeS beST-Selling noveliST Peter James iS moving from hiS home in Beddingham Place near lewes, and, if you’ve goT a cool £1.6m, iT could be yourS!

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Property: Beddingham Place, a collection of converted barns and outbuildings Location: Beddingham, nr. Lewes Price: £1.6M Bedrooms: 4/5 Bathrooms: 3 Land: 1 acre Best bit: Beddingham Place is situated in an elevated rural position within the newly formed South Downs National Park, with no immediate neighbours. Just the kind of peace and quiet you need if you’re penning your 21st crime novel, as author Peter James knows. Summary: Author of the Brighton-based Roy Grace novels, Peter James has lived in his East Sussex home for the past 13 years. Because of work he is now buying something a little closer to London, but the lovingly converted collection of outbuildings in which he has written most of his books remains close to his heart. “I have a huge study on the first floor that I converted from two bedrooms,” says Peter. “The room has a high ceiling and spectacular views towards Lewes, as well as towards Glynde to the north and the South Downs to the immediate south, and it’s big enough to house my growing collection of police memorabilia.” It is thought that the first record of buildings on the site dates from the late 1700s. Beddingham Place is understood to have originally formed part of the Glynde Estate, and then part of the Firle Estate. And one building, Peter tells us, was apparently once a hovel, dating back to the 14th century. Nowadays, the house which Peter ‘fell in love with at first sight’ provides spacious, light and well-presented accommodation over two floors. The dining room has a partially double-height vaulted ceiling, with a full-height window looking out onto the South Downs, together with an attractive fireplace with a wood burning stove. “I love the main living/dining area,” says Peter. “It doesn’t matter what the weather is like outside, this room always feels bright, warm and energising.” Features of note in the house include a four oven Aga, a drawing room with glazed doors leading out to the garden, a vaulted ceiling in the principal bedroom, a good size wine cellar and a large billiard room. Outside there is an all-weather tennis court, a walled courtyard garden and an ornamental pond. Peter is currently looking for another property in Sussex. Contact: Mishon Mackay 01273 834 602 mishonmackay.com

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A TYPICAL BRIGHTON SEAFRONT PROPERTY PERHAPS, BUT HOW MANY OTHER BUILDINGS CAN CLAIM TO HAVE PROVIDED INSPIRATION FOR THE RABBIT HOLE IN ALICE IN WONDERLAND?

Property: Ground-floor Grade I listed apartment Location: Lewes Crescent, Kemptown Price: £595,000 Bedrooms: 2 double Bathrooms: 1 Extras: Period detailing, luxury shower room, patio garden Best bit: These flats, along with just three other Brighton streets, have exclusive access to six acres of private, landscaped gardens. These include sheltered mature planting, open grass spaces and a barbeque area, but the best bit is the private tunnel leading down to Brighton beach. It’s believed that this passage gave Lewis Carroll the idea for the rabbit hole in Alice in Wonderland. Summary: This is an example of one of those truly sought-after Brighton properties. Built as part of Thomas Kemp’s exclusive east Brighton development in the early 1800s, the homes in this majestic sweeping arc enjoy views not only of the sea but onto the parkland in front. Notable past residents of this grand crescent include the

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Sixth Duke of Devonshire 1828-1858, Princess Louise (daughter of Edward VII) and the Duke of Fife 1896-1924. Now Grade I listed, the elegant wrought-iron balconies and colonnades mark it out as a special building. You gain access through a well-maintained impressive entrance with your own front door and entry phone system. This leads onto a spacious dining area, and then on to a fitted kitchen with cream wall and base units and solid dark oak work surfaces. The kitchen features a central island with Villeroy and Boch butler style sink plus a chrome swan neck tap. Large rooms and high ceilings are the hallmark of this building, and the lounge is a good example of this at 25’ x 16’8 with an 11’9” ceiling height. Coving, picture rails and ceiling roses are also prominent throughout. The two bedrooms are beautifully decorated and bedroom two in particular is a light and airy room with huge sash windows and a door leading to your own private patio area at the rear of the property. Contact: Fox and Sons 01273 688 148 sequencehome.co.uk

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Goldstone Crescent £995,000

Dyke Road Avenue £925,000

Interior designed contemporary styled house, opposite Hove Park, living room, open aspect fitted kitchen/dining room, utility room, cloakroom, integral garage

A detached 4/5 bedroom house situated on Dyke Road benefitting from having plenty of off road parking, spacious living accommodation and vacant possession.

Visage, Palmeira Avenue £650,000

Kings Gardens £850,000

Extremely well presented 3rd floor flat offering 3 double beds, south and west aspect reception, balcony and 2 parking spaces. This fabulous 3rd floor apartment

Outstanding sea views, 3rd floor apartment, almost 2000 sq ft, three bedrooms and utility room/office, sitting room, dining room, kitchen, family bathroom, en-suite

Brighton

82 Church Road | Hove | East Sussex BN3 2EB Sales 01273 230230 hove@hamptons-int.com Beyond your expectations www.hamptons.co.uk

Best for Innovation Hamptons International won the Best for Innovation award at the 2010 Estate Agency of the Year Awards in association with The Sunday Times and The Times, recognising its innovative marketing approach and launch of the Hamptons International app for iPhone and iPad. Call us to find out how we can use our market-leading approach to help you.

Grand Avenue Mansions £450,000 Completely refurbished mansion flat, interior designed, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, parking space, share of freehold.

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Courtenay Gate £450,000 Extremely well presented flat, seafront block, oblique sea views, refurbished to high standard, communal heating and hot water, 3 bedrooms, bathroom, shower room.

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Hove - £3,000 PCM Roedean - £3,800 PCM Fabulous penthouse apartment with outstanding direct sea views, two balconies and Fantastic six bed three reception room house with swimming pool and sea views in garage. Beautifully finished to an executive standard throughout and offered furnished. sought after location. Property benefits from double garage and driveway

Hove - £1,895 PCM

Arundel - £3,500 PCM

A lovely four bedroom family home with two bathrooms, roof terrace and decked garden, located just off Hove seafront.

A superbly presented, individually architect designed, contemporary detached lodge with five bedrooms and four bathrooms and swimming pool. Brighton

Best for Innovation Hamptons International won the Best for Innovation award at the 2010 Estate Agency of the Year Awards in association with The Sunday Times and The Times, recognising its innovative marketing approach and launch of the Hamptons International app for iPhone and iPad. Call us to find out how we can use our market-leading approach to help you.

Roedean - £2,995 PCM A large beautifully appointed detached house in the prestigious location of Roedean. With five double bedrooms and three bathrooms.

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82 Church Road | Hove | East Sussex BN3 2EB Lettings 01273 737777 brightonandhovelettings@hamptons-int.com Beyond your expectations

www.hamptons.co.uk

Westmeston - £1,750 PCM Beautiful property available within stunning grounds. This property forms part of a wing of a late Regency Manor House and has a wealth of charm and character.

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Piazza Perfect LARGE ROOMS, PRIVATE PARKING AND AN OUTSIDE AREA AREN’T NORMALLY FOUND IN BRIGHTON CITY-CENTRE APARTMENTS, BUT THIS ONE TICKS ALL THE BOXES Property: Avalon, a City-centre new-build apartment Location: West Street, Brighton Price: £337,500 Bedrooms: 2 Bathrooms: 2 Extras: Video-entry phone system, undercover private parking, en-suite shower room Best bit: This exclusive new development is within easy reach of Brighton mainline station and the City centre, yet has the benefit of private secure underground parking, relatively unheard of in this location. Summary: This roomy flat has all the contemporary features you could wish for, and is finished to a very high standard throughout. Most of the rooms feature solid oak flooring, and the large open-plan lounge/kitchen/dining room is a perfect space in which to entertain friends. The kitchen is a contemporary matt finished cream colour with AEG appliances, and just off the lounge area there is ample space for a dining table and chairs. The L-shaped master bedroom has recessed down lighters and two double floor-to-ceiling sliding wardrobes and an en-suite shower room. There is also a second bedroom and further separate bathroom with sand coloured tiles and Geberit appliances. Outside there’s a decked balcony, with clear glass safety panels, overlooking a delightful private piazza. Contact: John Hoole 01273 555 115 johnhoole.co.uk

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Property: Three-storey detached house Location: 34 Dyke Road Avenue, Hove Price: £1.65M Bedrooms: 7 Bathrooms: 2 Extras: Gated front drive, possibility for a games room, good sized rear garden. Best bit: This imposing double-fronted house borrows heavily from the Edwardian period, in particular the arts and crafts movement, and is also influenced by Tudor styling. The result is a very impressive-looking home with accentuated gables and a balcony that wouldn’t look out of place on a production of Romeo and Juliet. Summary: In this exclusive Hove street properties regularly sell for £1 million plus, and this house is no exception. A green tree-lined avenue, the houses are spaced well apart from each other, and most of them are set back from the road behind high wroughtiron gates. With easy access to the A27 (in fact Dyke Road Avenue turns into the A27 approximately a mile away), this would be a perfect spot for a commuter. There are two golf clubs within easy reach and Preston Park railway station is around 25 minutes walk. The property itself has a large gated driveway offering private parking for several cars, together with a beautiful rear garden. Inside there are three reception rooms; a light and airy kitchen/ breakfast room, a lounge/dining room and an impressive entrance hall. All of the rooms retain their period charm, with wall-panelling, coving, fireplaces and chandeliers, whilst managing to look unfussy and modern. Spread over the remaining two floors are five good-sized bedrooms and two slightly smaller bedrooms. There is also a family bathroom and, if you have children or grand-children, there’s a room which could be utilised as a large games room.

Getting in charact er Contact: Hamptons International 01273 230 230 hamptons.co.uk

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IF YOU HANKER AFTER A PROPERTY WITH THAT LITTLE BIT OF PERIOD CHARM, THIS ONE HAS IT IN SPADES, BUT YOU DON’T NEED TO SACRIFICE MODERN COMFORTS OR STYLING

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Nautical Nicety FOR SEAFRONT VIEWS YOU CAN’T GET MUCH BETTER THAN THIS, BUT TO ENJOY AN APARTMENT IN THIS PRIME LOCATION YOU’LL NEED A HEFTY HALF MILLION TO SPEND Property: Seafront apartment Location: The Van Alen building, Marine Parade, Brighton Price: £535,000 Bedrooms: 2 Bathrooms: 2 Extras: South-facing balcony, underground parking, communal garden with BBQ area, lift and concierge Best bit: This exclusive art-deco inspired apartment came in at number five in our Richest Apartments feature this month, and with apartments known to go for as much as £700,000, you can be sure you’re buying into an elite development. Summary: This two bedroom, two bathroom apartment is situated on the first floor of the prestigious Van Alen building on Brighton seafront. Not only does the property have direct pier and sea views, it also features a southfacing balcony from which to enjoy them. The rooms are generously proportioned with large windows and interesting design features such as curved bay windows, raised platforms and a porthole style west-facing window. The kitchen has Kuppersbusch integrated appliances and recessed halogen lights. The bedrooms continue with the contemporary theme but with an added touch of comfort in the form of luxurious carpets and built-in wardrobes. Contact: Justin Lloyd 01273 315612 justinlloyd.co.uk

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38 Keymer Road Hassocks West Sussex BN6 8AP Tel 01273 841228 Reigate 01737 226450 Tunbridge Wells 01892 617462

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WORDS NANCY CREMORE

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righton and Hove has long attracted the party set as well as the young and single; those who favour living in modern City centre apartments and converted Regency-style mansions rather than suburban brick terraces. So, it’s perhaps no surprise that outside of London we have the highest proportion of people living in purpose-built or converted flats at 45.4%. That’s almost have the population. In fact, according to census figures, one out of every 35 converted or shared dwellings in the whole of England and Wales can be found in Brighton and Hove.

With such a high proportion of us living in apartments, we wanted to find out where the most luxurious, exclusive and just plain expensive properties are in the City. And, more importantly, we wanted to let you know if you, your friends or relatives live in one of them. Just over £900,000, for example, would buy you a flat in North Street in the centre of Brighton. For this you’d get a magnificent penthouse apartment with fantastic views overlooking the Royal Pavilion and the City, not to mention door-stop access to the City’s shops, bars and clubs.

We looked at more than 1,000 transactions, compared prices and also talked to some of the local property market experts.

Where there has been little property offered for sale in certain apartment blocks we took into account the comments and views of these experts. It all makes fascinating reading. The findings, published over the following pages, list the top 25 hot spots where the most sought after places can be found. The deciding figures are based on the mean average of property sales over the last five years from particular roads or complexes. It’s important to remember that this gives a rough average, rather than a definitive price, for properties in these areas. In our impressive top five, the average price of an apartment is £507,667, increasing to an average of £601,000 for the top properties in Brighton and Hove. Even at the lower end of our list the mean price is £307,441; which is well above the UK average for a house (circa £245,000), let alone an apartment. Heading our list are the luxury apartments of Visage in Palmeira Ave, Hove, where the highest priced property sold for a cool £1.2million and the average was £601,000. Second spot goes to Bristol Court on Marine Parade in Brighton. In this former Kemptown mansion, flats don’t change hands very often. In fact, just one was sold here in the past five years, for £571,000. It is important to note that though there have been more expensive flats sold in other areas, the rarity of sales in Bristol Court has pushed its value up.

With this in mind our researchers have spent the last couple of months trawling the previous five years of property sales records in our area, in order to identify the top apartments.

In third place is Old Court House on Princes Street. Here the prices average £555,000, while the top apartments go for £700,000.

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For the same price, across the pond in France, you can purchase a chateau complete with pool, ten bedrooms and 35 acres of land. What a chateau like that would cost in Brighton and Hove (if there was one) we hate to think, but in a City where the average price of a flat is £209,180*, you just know it would be pretty steep.

Image courtesy of Victoria Dawe elegantandwild.co.uk

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FIRST WE BROUGHT YOU THE CITY’S RICHEST ROADS, THEN WE NAMED THE MOST INFLUENTIAL PEOPLE WITH OUR POWER LIST, NOW, SO MAGAZINE CAN EXCLUSIVELY REVEAL THE RICHEST APARTMENTS IN BRIGHTON AND HOVE

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Visage, Palmeira Ave, Hove Based on: 9 sales High: £1,200,000 Low: £390,000 Average: £601,000

The Visage building is arguably one of Hove’s most desirable developments of recent years, combining a convenient central location in the heart of sought-after Hove with all the mod-cons you’d expect from a top of the range apartment. This contemporary block sits on a wide, tree-lined avenue close to all of Hove’s shops and restaurants. Just a stone’s throw away is the historic Hove County Cricket Ground and if you follow your nose 600 metres or so south you’ll reach the quieter end of the beach. Built in 2007 by developer Stylelab Ltd., nine flats have changed hands in the last five years, the most expensive of which was a penthouse sold by Mishon Mackay Land and New Homes for £1.2 million. The least expensive flat in this building sold for a more-than-respectable £390,000, giving an average of £601,000. Julie Frith of Mishon Mackay says: “Visage is a land-mark design and set the standard for new buildings in the local area.” With west-facing balconies, secure private parking, wellmaintained communal areas and an entrance lobby decorated with artwork, this is clearly marked out as an apartment block for the well-heeled. Spacious rooms and top-of-the-range fixtures and fittings complete the luxurious feel. Most apartments, for example, feature travertine marble worktops, Villeroy and Boch sanitary ware and lavish Grohe tapware. Satellite television, which is pre-wired for Sky+ and HDTV comes as standard. And then, for the truly techy among us, these apartments are also pre-wired for a centrally-located Systemline audio visual system, so that you can listen to music or watch television in any room of the house.

Courtesy of Mishon Mackay

Courtesy of Mishon Mackay

Visage building courtesy of Victoria Dawe

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Bristol Court West, Marine Parade, Brighton Based on: 1 sale High: £571,000 Low: £571,000 Average: £571,000

Image courtesy of Adrian Brandish

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Old Court House, Princes Street, Brighton Based on: 2 sales High: £700,000 Low: £410,000 Average: £555,000

Directly north of the Palace pier and just a few minutes’ walk from the Old Steine is the Old Court House building on Princes Street. Tucked away down a narrow side road, the front door of this grand red-bricked building faces directly down Pavilion Street where the turrets of the Brighton Pavilion are neatly framed between two buildings. This secluded location, set back from the main road, has a pub (The Marlborough) opposite and is within easy reach of the town centre, beach and Brighton mainline station.

It’s been rumoured that a Princess has an apartment in this building which she uses as a weekend retreat. And with its impressive architecture, the nearby shops and watering holes of Kemptown just a short walk away plus stunning sea views, it’s no wonder that this is a part of the City favoured by royalty. This Regency-style townhouse, which towers majestically over the promenade, brings to mind the grandeur of Brighton as it would have been nearly two centuries ago. The rooms boast generous proportions, terraces with direct coastal views and sash bay windows. The building was designed by William Hallett, who was later a Mayor of Brighton. He bought the piece of undeveloped land on the estate of the Marquess of Bristol in 1835 for £1,050 (over 500 times less than a single flat in the building costs now). It was designated as a listed building on 13 October 1952, and converted into flats and a public house (Bristol Bar) in 1935. Only one flat has changed hands here in the past five years, at £571,000 in October last year. “People tend to stay here a long time because it’s such an attractive building and location,” says Edward Middle from Fox and Sons, Kemptown.

Only two flats have changed hands there in the last five years, the most expensive of which went for £700,000 and the least expensive at £410,000 giving an average of £555,000. Hamptons International recently sold a two bedroom flat here for £815,000, which is not on the land registry figures yet but which will no doubt push this special location up a notch or two in next year’s list. Says Andrea Harding from Hamptons: “As it was not originally built to be an apartment the rooms are large and the ceilings very high, you certainly wouldn’t find this scale in a new build property.” Apart from the charm of the building itself, the apartments here have sash windows, walnut floors, outside terrace gardens and lovely large entrance halls. And if that’s not enough, they also have spacious living rooms with marble fireplaces, contemporary styled kitchens, under-floor heating and private parking (a luxury in this neck of the woods). This historic building is believed to date from 1894 and was formerly the Parochial Offices for Brighton (relating to Parish matters). The building served as the meeting place for the Brighton Guardians of the Poor, a board made up of elected officials who were responsible for the welfare of the poor and the condition of local workhouses in Brighton.

This property was previously listed for sale in May 2010 for £318,500. “The flat which we sold here in October had been completely refurbished,” says Edward. “Everything was brand new, including the wiring and central heating, and it could be moved straight into.” A split-level flat with a lovely roof top terrace, sea views from the lounge, dining room and master bedroom, plus a parking space right outside, this is certainly an exclusive building. Last year there was a lower ground floor flat and a first floor balcony for sale – these haven’t come on to the listings yet and may bring down the average when they do.

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Courtesy of Hamptons Inte rnational

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Best of the rest Making up the remainder of the top ten are some of the usual suspects. In at number four is Ruston Heights in Withdean Avenue - an exclusive development of eight large apartments with secure underground parking. Just a short hop from Withdean Road, which featured in our Richest Roads list back in July, and close to Preston Park station, flats here go for an average of £511,143. The newly built and gleaming white Van Alen building (pictured) on Marine Parade comes in at number five with a high of £700,000. Although not everybody’s cup of tea, most agree that this nautically-inspired PRC Fewsterdesigned building sits well in its prime location on Brighton seafront. Princes House on North Street comes in at number eight. In a prime spot surrounded by restaurants, the theatres and the Pavilion, it’s perhaps no wonder that an apartment is currently for sale here with Baron Estates for £999,950. The average over the last five years for this location has been £488,071, a figure pushed down by some lower-end sales. Just inside the top ten at number nine, exclusive flats in Hove can be found in Palmeira Avenue. Apartments in Sussex View here go for a high of £610,000 and an average of £482,667. Other desirable locations further down the scale include Eaton Garden Mansions, Vallance Gardens, Kings Gardens, Kings Esplanade and Upper Drive. Away from the seafront now - the secluded Hanover Crescent in Brighton, hidden from the road by an attractive stone wall and right opposite the Level park comes in at number 19. The highest-priced apartment sold here cost £850,000, but a low of £128,000 brings this figure down to an average of £342,929. At number 24, but with an average price certainly not to be sniffed at, is Somerhill Avenue in Hove. Properties in this eclectic street, with the attractive St Ann’s Well Gardens at the bottom of the road, come in at an average of £318,731. And at number 25 is Chichester Terrace in Brighton, where the average price of a flat is £307,441. Bonett’s Estate Agents have just sold a first floor balcony flat here for £790,000 which may bump this area up a point or two in next year’s ratings.

Van Alen building courtesy of Winkworth

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Ruston Heights, Withdean Ave, Brighton Based on: 7 sales High: £700,000 Low: £325,000 Average: £511,143

Van Alen Building, Marine Parade, Brighton Based on: 12 sales High: £700,000 Low: £347,000 Average: £507,667

Station Road, Preston, Brighton Based on: 5 sales High: £1,050,000 Low: £190,000 Average: £491,800

Marlborough Place, Brighton Based on: 5 sales High: £980,000 Low: £134,835 Average: £491,900

Princes House, North Street, Brighton Based on: 7 sales High: £921,500 Low: £167,000 Average: £488,071

Sussex View, Palmeira Ave, Hove Based on: 3 sales High: £610,000 Low: £413,000 Average: £482,667

Eaton Garden Mansions, Eaton Gardens, Hove Based on: 2 sales High: £530,000 Low: £425,000 Average: £477,500

Tamworth House, Marine Parade, Brighton Based on: 4 sales High: £630,000 Low: £224,000 Average: £455,375

Vallance Gardens, Hove Based on: 2 sales High: £690,000 Low: £150,000 Average: £420,000

Royal Court, Kings Gardens, Hove Based on: 3 sales High: £560,000 Low: £175,000 Average: £420,000

Bath Court, Kings Esplanade, Hove Based on: 2 sales High: £575,000 Low: £185,000 Average: £380,000 16. Upper Drive, Hove

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Upper Drive, Hove Based on: 11 High: £875,000 Low: £147,000 Average: £ 379,136

Rufford Court, Marine Parade, Brighton Based on: 3 sales High: £725,000 Low: £165,000 Average: £371,233

Princes Street, Brighton Based on: 13 sales High: £700,000 Low: £210,000 Average: £369,573

Avalon, West Street, Brighton Based on: 40 sales High: £579,950 Low: £215,000 Average: £345,084

Hanover Crescent, Brighton Based on: 7 sales High: £850,000 Low: £128,000 Average: £342,929

Eaton Gate, Hove Based on: 3 sales High: £475,000 Low: £226,000 Average: £328,667

Gainsborough House, Eaton Gardens, Hove Based on: 5 sales High: £732,500 Low: £200,000 Average: £322,500

At a glance Researchers compiling our list of Richest Apartments examined more than 1,000 property sales. You can buy a castle in southern France for the same price as one high end apartment in Brighton and Hove. Visage in Palmeira Avenue, Hove tops the list with the highest priced apartment at £1.2miilion and an average of £601,000.

Image courtesy of Victoria Dawe elegantandwild.co.uk

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45.5% of dwellings in Brighton and Hove are either apartments, flats or bed-sits, over five times the average for the rest of England and Wales. Marine Parade on Brighton seafront dominates the list, occupying numbers 2, 5, 11 and 17 of our top 25 most expensive positions. Apartments in the beautiful late-Georgian arc of houses that is Montpelier Crescent and those in the ‘flat-lands’ of Brunswick Square remain low on the list. Over £78 million worth of flats and apartments changed hands in the last five years in our 25 areas alone. *Land registry of England and Wales, figures from July to September 2010

Old Court House, Both pictures, inside the s International pton Ham of y rtes cou

Stepney Court, Fleet Street, Brighton Based on: 17 sales High: £575,000 Low: £261,796 Average: £318,290

Courtenay Gate, Courtenay Terrace, Hove Based on: 6 sales High: £450,000 Low: £209,500 Average: £316,667

Somerhill Ave, Hove Based on: 31 sales High: £725,000 Low: £200,000 Average: £318,731

Chichester Terrace Based on: 29 sales High: £875,000 Low: £70,000 Average: £307,441

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FABULOUS FLOORS

These Cumbrian Slate tiles, also from Amtico, have interesting muted green tones, and when combined with their organic horizontal patterning, lend a traditional look to any space. Fabulous Floors

A glam metal shot floor from Amtico which has an interesting beaten effect texture and a smattering of silver powder to give ultra sparkle. This floor screams style and sophistication, perfect for a single person’s pad. Available from Fabulous Floors, Hurstpierpoint 01273 833 681 fabulous-floors.co.uk

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GREG STONE FLOORING (Right) A highly contemporary and desirable range of 100% wool loop pile carpets by Brockway. The Lakeland Herdwick range is inspired by the rugged and exceptional qualities of the Herdwick, Britain’s hardiest breed of hill sheep. This is a highly durable carpet thanks to the natural resilience of Herdwick wool, and is available in two very distinctive designs in 4m wide broadloom. Available from Greg Stone Flooring, Portslade 01273 423 444 gregstoneflooring.co.uk

(Left) Thought this was real wood? Yes, so did we. Karndean has developed the Art Select Woods range of luxury vinyl flooring to combine the natural beauty of a wooden floor with the practical qualities of luxury vinyl planks. Available in seventeen realistic wood hues, it won’t splinter, warp or stain and is suitable for kitchens and bathrooms. This is their ‘Auburn Oak’ parquet-style floor with 9” x 3” tiles. Greg Stone Flooring

THE BAMBOO FLOORING COMPANY Bamboo flooring is one of the hardest natural materials, and an excellent alternative to regular wood. In fact it has a higher fibre rating than hard wood, which gives it its exceptional hard-wearing qualities. And because bamboo is a rapid growing grass, it can be harvested every 3-5 years, unlike 15-25 years for most wood. This makes bamboo a very environmentally friendly product for flooring. The Uniclic Tiger bamboo floor (left) has a gorgeous bold and striking pattern made from solid strand woven bamboo. Prices start from £28.69 per square metre. The Bamboo Flooring Company

This Uniclic Carbonised bamboo floor is made from carbonised solid strand woven bamboo and prices start from £27.55 per square metre. Available from the Bamboo Flooring Company 0116 2741 050 bambooflooringcompany.com MARCH 2011

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J’ADORE GALLERY

on this page: Sarah Graham ‘Saucy Sundae’ Boxed Canvas 31.5X 31.5 £525.00 Kim Haskins ‘Not Amewsed’ Canvas On Board 20 x 20 £499.00 Paul Kenton ‘Angel of The South’ Boxed Canvas 36 x 36 £699.00 J’adore Art, 2 Nile Pavilions, Nile Street, The Lanes, Brighton BN1 1HW 01273 776 070 info@jadore-art.co.uk www.jadore-art.co.uk

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on this page: Neil Dawson ‘Brooklyn Nights’ Canvas On Board 14 x 40 £585.00 Paul Corfield ‘Rainbow Cove’ Giclee On Paper 12 x 24 £450.00 Frog By Tim Cotterill (Frogman) £419.00 We now have a wide selection of original art in the gallery and our new Spring collection is available from March 2011 look online (www.jadore-art.co.uk) to see new works by Sarah Graham and Kim Haskins.

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MOST PEOPLE STAYING IN A HOTEL VENTURE OUT IN SEARCH OF A RESTAURANT. AND IF THE HOTEL IS IN OUR OWN TOWN OR CITY WE TEND TO OVERLOOK IT ALL TOGETHER AS A PLACE TO EAT. BUT ARE WE MISSING OUT? NANCY CREMORE INVESTIGATES 64

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And when we get to our destination the culinary situation often isn’t much better. Hotels may provide a comfy place to rest ones head overnight, but the menus, which seem to rely heavily on scampi and chips, breaded mushrooms and spaghetti carbonara, can leave a rather bland taste in the mouth. So, it’s fair to say that I had mixed feelings about visiting the Windsor Restaurant at the Hilton Brighton Metropole. Although perhaps some of this was down to the weather: as we made our way there, I couldn’t help thinking that on a mild summer’s evening the stroll along Brighton seafront to the hotel would be an enjoyable part of the experience. However, this was a dark winter’s evening in February, and the wind was gale force. And so it was, that, with hair all over my face and gasping for breath, we passed through the revolving doors of this rather imposing red-bricked seafront building and made our way through the hotel lobby to the restaurant. And then something magical happened. As soon as Rowena, our maitre d’ for the evening, had taken our coats and guided us across the grand dining room to our cosy little table by the window, I relaxed, nay visibly exhaled.

weeks, air dried and then cold oak smoked, was piled generously onto the plate in wafer thin berry-brown slices, surrounded by vinegary green leaves and dotted with sweet firm triangles of rosy sloe jelly. To say that the meat was tender would be an understatement, this was melt in the mouth, chew it twice and it’s gone-type texture, with a mouth-wateringly peppery after-taste from the smoking process. My dining partner plumped for the pressed leek and lobster terrine with caviar dressing. This was as visually pleasing a dish as you could possibly hope to find, truly summer-on-a-plate (if only). Quills of vibrant green baby leek, which had been blanched in boiling water for a couple of minutes and then quenched straight into ice water to stop the cooking process, were parceled together with chunks of coral-pink lobster. The twist in the fishy tale of this particular dish came in the form of sage-green nuggets of caviar spooned alongside. This countered the delicate fresh flavour of the lobster and leek with a pleasing earthy and salty vinegariness. As you will have noted by now, I’m a big fan of the atmosphere in this place, and, in combination with a chilled glass of Chablis and a plate of smoked venison, the effect was very soothing indeed. So I looked up from my plate to find that the restaurant had filled up quite considerably since we arrived. Most of the tables down our end of this vast dining room were full, and there was a man conversing in a strong French accent

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ur choice of food on the move in this country isn’t great. Before Marks and Spencer came to our road-side rescue, the most we could hope for was an overpriced service-station sandwich, a fast-food burger in a bun or an equally unappetising Little Chef meal.

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Jazz and swing classics were crooned out by a singer standing beside a black Grand piano, whilst a father and his young daughter were engaged in quiet chatter behind us. And in the soft amber glow coming from the magnificently ornate chandelier, it seemed almost like we’d stepped back in time. I could go on about the décor of this room, but in this era of striving to be modern, it’s very refreshing to see something so purposefully old-fashioned. No formica ‘canteen-style’ benches, no quirky ‘retro’ furniture, just a beautifully elaborate, character-filled building, classically styled. The service was also impeccably traditional. Anne-Laure, our French waitress, kitted out in the requisite black waistcoat and skirt, recommended a very nice bottle of Gloire de Chablis, Moreau (£32.20), which we sipped whilst nibbling hungrily on mini bread rolls and butter. About the service, this was discreetly attentive. Not once was I interrupted mid-sentence for a comment on how the food was, and our glasses were rarely empty. We settle on the a la carte menu and found a feast of options to choose from. Smoked salmon with pea puree, twice baked bread and butter soufflé and Gruyere and carrot rosti, to name just a few. Head Chef Anthony Molnar and sous chef James Flewit’s backgrounds working in Michelin starred restaurants were certainly in evidence in the inventiveness of the dishes and in the concentration on flavour and the combinations thereof. To start, I chose smoked fillet of Venison with hedgerow salad and sloe jelly. The venison, which had been marinated for two MARCH 2011

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behind us, which almost felt as if it’d been specifically laid on for effect. People who looked as if they were staying in the hotel seem to have arrived (I’m not sure if I was correct in this deduction, it’s just something about the confidence with which they ordered and the casual banter between them and the waiting staff), and there was a general feeling of Friday night merriment beginning to brew. But back to the food – when chatting to chef Anthony later, I realise that my dining partner had inadvertently chosen one of the chef’s signature dishes for the main course – pork belly and confit pork cheeks with barley, caramelised parsnip and cider gravy. However, I am equally happy with my choice braised beef served in cooking liquor with Sussex blue cheese dumplings, baby onions and turnip. These hearty dishes arrive at the table with side-orders of green beans and sautéed potatoes. This is food that doesn’t mess around: we’ve had the light touches, the delicate flavour combinations and the whimsical design, now we need to eat. And boy do these dishes deliver on that front. Anthony says that everything in the pork belly dish is slow cooked to allow all of the natural sugars and flavours to develop, and to make the meat nice and tender. But before any

of this can happen, the pork belly is marinated for a couple of days and salted. After cooking, the heat is cranked right up to crisp the skin. The pork cheeks are then braised and barley is added to soak up all the flavours. Even the parsnips are slow-cooked to release their sugars and then blasted with heat to allow them to caramelise. My beef delivered an equally impressive flavour punch. A dollop of silky potato puree, a hunk of succulent beef and sweet golden-brown dumplings – what’s not to like? The whole lot is then coated in a rich and gleaming meat sauce. The beef peeled away with little effort from either knife or fork, and, when plunged into the deeply savoury and creamy potato puree, tasted absolutely divine. If you’re on a diet look away now, as I later learn from Anthony that the beef is marinated, strung and tied and then braised in duck fat for around four to five hours. The dumplings were nicely crisp on the outside and soft within. Their Sussex blue cheese flavour cut through the richness of the beef with ease. And chefs James and Andrew had evidently thought of everything – what I suspected was clove-scented turnip (sounds terrible, tastes delicious) was in fact just that. Although pudding might at this stage sound like we were intent on indulging in pure gluttony, I am afraid to say that is exactly what we did. But, apart from the warm hot chocolate fondant with hot chocolate ice cream and chocolate coffee beans, the puddings on offer here are generally light. I opted for the Italian inspired lavender panacotta with strawberry soup and roasted strawberries. This desert can sometimes turn out to be a bit of a disappointment, but I am pleased to say this was most definitely not the case here. It was velvety in texture and yet held its shape well, with just the right amount of lavender scent and a mild and creamy vanilla flavour. My dining partner had the marinated pineapple ravioli with mango and raspberries. Again there was a note of clove infused into the ravioli filling to evoke the tastes of mulled wine. The mango shot was also flavoured with Galliano, which has hints of spice. As Anne-Laure clears our plates we notice that we are among the last two or three couples in the dining room, and still we don’t want to leave. No more will I walk past this hotel assuming that there’s nothing here for me. What was I missing! This is a hotel I would gladly visit again, and I’ll be heading straight for the window table at the Windsor. SO

The Windsor restaurant at the Hilton Brighton Metropole, Kings Rd, Brighton, East Sussex BN1 2FU 01273 775 432 hilton.co.uk Prices from: Starters £6.95, Mains: £13.50 Sides: £3.50, Desserts: £6.50 Wine by the glass: £4.95 Wine by the bottle: £18.95

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Free glass of wine per person with every two course meal (based on two people sharing, evening meal only) valid only with this advert

115 Church Road, Hove, East Sussex, BN3 2AF 01273 777488 info@gallerybistrohove.co.uk www.gallerybistrohove.co.uk

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MEET THE HEADS THE DRIVING FORCE BEHIND ANY SCHOOL IS THE HEAD. HE OR SHE WILL HAVE A PROFOUND INFLUENCE ON THE WAY YOUR CHILD DEVELOPS BOTH INSIDE AND OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM. SO, WE ASKED SIX LEADING HEADS ABOUT THEIR PERSONAL APPROACH TO EDUCATION AND HOW THEY JUDGE SUCCESS

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ARDINGLY COLLEGE Address: Ardingly, Haywards Heath, West Sussex RH17 6SQ Type of School: Independent, Co-ed, Boarding and Day Pre-Prep, Prep and Senior Schools Cost per term (day): From £3,325 - £6,490 Cost per term (boarding): From £4,575 - £8,650 Website: ardingly.com Name of Head: Peter Green, MA (Hons) PGCE and Cert RE Time in position: Four years Tell us about your personal approach to education. Ardingly makes a special commitment to all aspects of life - the spiritual, cultural, academic and co-curricular; education here is less a programme, more an atmosphere and environment, producing very friendly, unpretentious, grounded children, who have a real sense of their being. Ardingly is a true family: it has ups-and-downs, celebrations, moments of grief, moments of love but, above all, we are underpinned by forgiveness, the essential ingredient. All schools must remain a community of learners, and the biggest learner of all must be the Headmaster. I believe that if staff stop

reading their subjects, they should stop teaching. How do you judge your success? I measure it by looking at my students leaving Ardingly and I see we have nourished the freedom, the flair, the confidence to be a great character, and the depth, vision and emotional intelligence to be of good character - so much more than league table success. What are your pupil demographics? 850 boys and girls, age 2 ½ - 18, with 500 in the Senior School; Ardingly is a local school with an international outlook, 85% British, 15% other nationalities, the majority European. How involved are parents in what goes on at the school? I stand under the College Archway every morning so that parents can talk to me. A vibrant Friends organisation runs social events, with representatives in each junior year group and senior house. Reports go to parents every four weeks; there is a fortnightly newsletter; my assemblies are posted on our e-portal; we seek parental feedback through focus groups. What comment about the School (Ofsted parent/pupil etc.) are you most proud of? The Archbishop of York, a former parent, said “Ardingly takes pupils who may be just ordinary and turns them into extraordinary young people.”

The Farmhouse Nursery & Pre-prep

Wednesday 16th March 2011 – Wednesday 11th May 2011

The Prep & Senior School

Saturday 5th March 2011 – Saturday 7th May 2011 Please contact the Registrar for further information.

01444 893000

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www.ardingly.com

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BELLERBYs COLLEGE Address: 1 Billinton Way, Brighton BN1 4LF Type of School: Independent Cost per term (day): £6,490

best Maths A’ Level results for any independent school in the country is good news.

Time in position: 14 years

What are your pupil demographics? We have pupils from 90 different countries, particularly, China, Russia, Hong Kong, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Singapore, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Vietnam and the Baltic States

Tell us about your personal approach to education? Good teachers, flexible courses, strict discipline and plenty of support staff to help students manage and self-motivate themselves.

How involved are parents in what goes on at the school? They receive twice termly reports, plus some get emails weekly if they request it and we telephone them with any issues. I travel to many countries for parents’ meetings.

How do you judge your success? Individual results and future progression to university if applicable. Public exam league tables are less important although to be number one in Brighton this year and to get the

What comment about the school (Ofsted/parent/pupil etc) are you most proud of? Outstanding support for students at all levels.

Cost per term (boarding): £9,660 (ensuite sharing) – £10,260 (ensuite single) Website: bellerbys.com Name of Head: Nigel Addison BSc, PGCE

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BRIGHTON & HOVE HIGH SCHOOL Address: Radinden Manor Road, Hove BN3 6NH Type of School: Independent Day School for girls age 3-11 Cost per term (day): £2292 Cost per term (boarding): n/a Website: bhhs.gdst.net Name of Head: Sian Cattaneo BA Cert ED Time in position: Since January 2011 Tell us about your personal approach to education? The most important thing is to treat all pupils as individuals and focus on developing their potential in a supportive community. How do you judge your success? Success is about helping to develop confident, rounded individuals who enjoy school and are keen to face challenges.

How involved are parents in what goes on at the school? We pride ourselves on the trust that parents place in us to encourage, inspire and nurture their children. We play our part in communicating readily with them, being open to new ideas and working hard to keep parents actively involved in the life of the school. What comment about the school (Ofsted/parent/pupil etc) are you most proud of? “Choosing BHHS for our daughter was the best decision we ever made. She loves everything about the school and we love being part of such a great community”

What are your pupil demographics? Girls only, aged 3-11. We have our own purpose built nursery and take part in the early years funding. We have a purpose built site in Hove.

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HANDCROSS PARK SCHOOL Address: Handcross Park School, Handcross, near Haywards Heath, West Sussex RH17 6HF Type of School: Co-educational Boarding and Day Prep School (ages 2-13) Cost per term (day): £2,800 - £4,769 Cost per term (boarding): £5,588 Website: handcrossparkschool.co.uk Name of Head: Graeme Owton - BA (Hons) Time in position: Start as Head in April 2011 Tell us about your personal approach to education? I am a strong advocate of an all-round education. At present our country is in danger of producing a generation of consumers and not citizens; schools like Handcross Park have a duty to ensure that pupils are not only afforded a wide range of opportunities through a wider curriculum both in and out of the classroom, but are also taught the importance of recognising their own levels of well-being, through exposure to the aptitudes that make up a well-rounded education. A great deal of the research demonstrates that children who really do experience an education of this ilk are not only more rounded individuals capable of succeeding and enjoying their adult lives, but higher achievers also.

How do you judge your success? That’s an easy one. I judge success on levels of happiness within the whole school community. I want to see happy children, happy staff and happy parents. All the research shows that if children truly enjoy school, they achieve both in and out of the classroom. We have an amazing staff body at Handcross Park. They are not only successful and highly experienced at what they do, they are also totally committed to the school and passionate about education. This rubs off on the children, who respond to the high standards set by their teachers. The by-product of this is of course happy and satisfied parents. How involved are parents in what goes on at the school? I am a strong believer in parental involvement in education. In my experience the best results are achieved when there is a strong sense of teamwork between teachers and parents. Parents often visit schools for plays, sports fixtures and concerts, but I also believe they should be invited in on other occasions to see the children during the school day. We are proud of the high quality of education we provide at Handcross Park and I want the parents to see that first hand. What comment about the school (Ofsted/parent/pupil etc) are you most proud of? Handcross Park’s last inspection report described the pastoral care as “exceptional” – a word not often used by inspectors. This is important to me and all the staff, as the quality of the pastoral care underpins the culture and ethos of the school. Happy, safe and well-rounded children are far better learners and achievers.

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LANCING COLLEGE Address: Lancing, West Sussex BN15 0RW Type of School: Independent (HMC), Co-ed, Boarding and Day Cost per term (day): £6,465 Cost per term (boarding): £9,250 Website: lancingcollege.co.uk Name of Head: Mr Jonathan Gillespie MA PGCE Time in position: Since 2006 Tell us about your personal approach to education? The outstanding education provided at Lancing focuses on nurturing each individual pupil and encouraging all-round development through outstanding pastoral care. I believe passionately that education is so much more than what is taught and learnt in the classroom; it is so much more than can be summarised by grades on an examination certificate or by a school’s position in league tables. In addition to strong academic results Lancing fosters in its pupils vital life skills for their young adult lives – for example self confidence (but not arrogance!), integrity, independence of mind and self-motivation.

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How do you judge your success? The ‘buzz’ of our happy and busy school community is a very important measure, as is the large number of happy pupils and satisfied parents. Word of mouth is one of the most important marketing tools! Strong pupil numbers, high standards of academic achievement (in value-added terms as well as ‘raw’ results), and university entrance statistics are also factors. Ultimately the ‘best’ school is the one that is right for each individual pupil. What are your pupil demographics? Lancing is a boarding school with day pupils. About two-thirds of our pupils board – they mostly come from within a two-hour radius of Lancing – and we have some overseas pupils who add much to the cosmopolitan atmosphere of the school which makes an important contribution to our ethos. Some day pupils are very local (Brighton, Hove, Shoreham, Worthing); others travel in from Chichester, Horsham, Haywards Heath and Lewes. How involved are parents in what goes on at the school? Education is a partnership between the school and home founded on mutual trust. Neither party can succeed on its own. We encourage regular contact and communication between the school and parents, and parents are always welcome at school events such as matches, plays and concerts. What comment about the school (Ofsted/parent/pupil etc) are you most proud of? Ofsted (2007 & 2010): The overall quality rating is outstanding.

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SHOREHAM COLLEGE Address: St. Julian’s Lane, Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex BN43 6YW Type of School: Independent Day School for girls and boys age 3-16 Cost per term (day): £2,350-£3,800 per term Cost per term (boarding): n/a Website: shorehamcollege.co.uk Name of Head: Jim Stearns, BSc, PGCE, MA, NPQH Time in position: 2 years Tell us about your personal approach to education? I have been fortunate to have had a range of experiences, in a number of schools, through commitment and enthusiasm. I give my best and encourage the children here at Shoreham College to do the same. How do you judge your success? I lead a team of talented and dedicated staff. My success is Shoreham College’s success in not only preparing children with a solid education, but enriching their lives with confidence, team spirit and personal endeavour.

What are your pupil demographics? Shoreham College attracts all walks of life from across Sussex and challenges and supports a wide range of abilities and talents. How involved are parents in what goes on at the school? We use all types of communication: email, newsletters, and parents’ evenings to encourage parents to be able to discuss their child’s development. Parent events this term include an internet safety talk, a Parents Association quiz night and a business forum. What comment about the school (Ofsted/parent/pupil etc) are you most proud of? The January Nursery Inspection gave all four ratings as ‘Excellent’, but more importantly is the feedback from pupils and parents. One recent quote from a parent about a member of staff: “The level of pastoral care you bring to Shoreham is what I believe the ethos of the school is all about.”

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Into the WORDS SIMON KING

IF YOU’RE THE KIND OF PERSON WHO THINKS THE LIKES OF FERRARI AND ASTON MARTIN AREN’T QUITE EXCLUSIVE ENOUGH, TAKE A LOOK AT THIS WEDGE-SHAPED WONDER. IT’S THE REINVENTION OF A SEVENTIES CLASSIC AND IS MORE THAN A LITTLE BIT EXCLUSIVE 76

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The old and the new Lancia Stratos

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he Lancia Stratos is one car that motoring enthusiasts around the world are more than familiar with. The Italian machine’s phenomenal success in the 70s and 80s rally scene has led to it becoming enshrined in motorsport history.

the Stratos through the Alitalia liveried Scalextric cars. Either way, one can’t help but feel a pang of desire whenever the name is mentioned.

Perhaps you are one of the very few to have seen or even driven the original very limited edition road car, or maybe from a younger generation who learnt of the iconic status afforded

He knows a thing or two about cars after 34 years at the business and his allies in producing the car are also rather well respected. To recreate the 1970s classic Mr. Stoschek has

The name Michael Stoschek, on the other hand, will probably be unknown to even the most diehard petrol heads. However, he’s the man responsible for bringing a new version of this legendary machine into existence.

A new Stratos is a tantalising prospect then, yet here it is. Currently it’s a one-off customer car costing some £3million to the specification of Mr. Stoschek who, by the way, is exchairman of Brose – a huge German automotive parts manufacturer with revenues of around £2.5 billion in the last year.

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teamed up with Italian design house and coachbuilder Pininfarina, as well as ‘borrowing’ more than a few parts from the Ferrari 430 Scuderia. Launched at the exclusive race track in the south of France, Circuit Paul Ricard, the new Stratos is a glorious looking thing, resplendent in what looks like a gloss black finish, but is in fact a deeply lacquered bare carbon fibre weave. That most exotic of car building materials is the first indicator of the quality of this car, all of the details are just so, with the original ‘ducktail’ and roof spoilers both present and providing real aerodynamic value. This new Stratos is the brainchild of car designer Chris Hrabalek and Mr. Stoschek and shares more than its overall look with the original; it too was designed with a visor-like front windscreen which Pininfarina describes as semi-circular, giving the driver a near panoramic view of the fast moving scenery coming towards them. The ‘clamshell’ front and rear opening body sections were mandatory in the redesign, contributing to the super-short wheelbase and mid-engine layout – all enabling extreme agility, just like the original. The new car, as with the 1970s original, owes a great deal to Ferrari. This one-off design is based on a Ferrari 430 Scuderia platform, albeit with 20cm taken off the length of its chassis. It even bares the signature of current Ferrari President, Luca di Montezemolo who drove it before the official launch. Turn the key and this car immediately tells you it is powered by the Scuderia’s 4.3 litre V8 engine, no other engine sounds like this flat-plane crank V8 and it is a glorious thing.

The steering wheel has LEDs along its top edge to tell you when you are reaching the rev limit of the 523bhp screamer behind your shoulders (up 20bhp from the donor car’s engine thanks, mostly, to a custom exhaust), which is just as well as the 0-60 run will take just an estimated 3.5 seconds. Things happen quickly in this environment, all the way up to around 200mph with the paddle operated sequential gearbox (Ferrari no longer sell cars with a traditional manual gearbox).

The engine of the first Lancia Stratos HF was also a Ferrari unit, opening the rear clamshell on one of the prized original reveals another of the most evocative names in motoring – ‘Dino’. The Dino name being attributed to one of the most widely prized Ferraris, the V6 sports car named in honour of founder Enzo Ferrari’s son, who died at the age of 24.

The 1,270kg kerb weight means the Stratos is 80kg lighter than the already very slender 430 Scuderia, so you can invite a passenger to enjoy this amazing recreation without the performance deficit of the donor car. In the original you would be practically rubbing shoulders with your passenger but not here. Comfort and, more importantly, support from the seats is exactly what you need from a car whose handling is as incisive as this. The short wheelbase and mid-engine layout make for scalpel sharp direction changes, always on the very edge of balance, again reminiscent of the original.

The 70s model was built by the other Italian car design power house, Bertone, based on their ‘Bertone Stratos Zero’ concept car. It evolved into the first of the modern age of rally car, built with a new singularity of purpose that saw the factory Lancia team effectively build the car around their star driver Sandro Munari. He and the Lancia Stratos HF won World Championships in 1974, ’75 and ’76, and drove to spectacular success in the glamorous Monte Carlo Rally in ’75, ’76 and ’77. Road cars were a happy necessity, rules dictating that 500 road going cars be created in order that the vehicle could enter the Rally Championship (rumour has it that only 492 were actually produced). The glorious reinterpretation of this beautiful and iconic car includes an interior brought up-to-date using the internals of the Scuderia but faced in bespoke architecture of carbonfibre or suede. This includes the door bins that have space for a full sized race helmet on both sides in the same way as the competition inspired original.

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The good news is that there are now rumours that Mr Stoschek is willing to share his amazing rejuvenated classic. If so, the £3 million investment that he is alleged to have made could be recouped by a potential £500,000 ticket price for the 25 or so examples that Pininfarina may produce. If you’re in the market for what feels like a full production supercar with ultimate exclusivity and the name means something to you, what could be better? And if you can’t quite stretch to the asking price… simply celebrate the existence of an icon, remastered. SO

Facts at a glance: Lancia Stratos Engine: 4.3litre Ferrari V8 Power: 523bhp 0-60 mph: 3.5 seconds Top Speed: +200mph Price: circa £500,000 (if sold)

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Sponsored by: BUSINESS

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IN BUSINESS There are so many clichés about Brighton that it can be hard to really know the City unless you live and breathe it every day. In the same way that we visit the famous landmarks of other cities around the world, I watch countless visitors touring the lanes, the pavilion and the palace pier, soaking up the buzz that only a day out in Brighton can give you.

Samantha Maxwell-Reed

But do they see the ‘real’ Brighton? One that is creative, energetic, unique and inspiring, with an eclectic collection of residents and some of the best places to socialise in the country, plus a fantastic choice of music, food and entertainment.

When I established my business in 1998, I wanted to create something special by providing real value to international clients. We needed exceptional people to deliver this. The recruitment industry is notoriously competitive and to attract the best we needed a very special USP. Brighton gave us this – we advertised our roles with strap lines such as ‘…a London salary and a Brighton lifestyle…’ with photos of commuters rushing out of town to head to work in London each morning. Our concept was simple and has proved very effective – we offer London, and indeed world class, career opportunities and earning potential for our team, but remain located in the centre of the best City in Britain. Expand Executive Search are proud to work with global brands from our base here in the centre of Brighton. The work/life balance has been restored – we work very hard whilst in the office, and enjoy fantastic rewards for our successes – but we have Brighton & Hove, and indeed the rest of Sussex with all that it has to offer, right on our doorstep. One of my highlights of the last year was taking my whole team down to Brighton Marina for the day – enjoying various activities on the water, the highlight of which was chartering a luxury yacht and seeing Brighton from the sea. The sun shone, the champagne flowed – it was a fantastic day out and simply couldn’t have been better. The real beauty of basing your business in Brighton is this ability to mix professionalism and hard work with the benefits of living and working in a vibrant and exciting city. We have attracted great talent from top London brands because of this, and in a competitive economy with tough competition, the team here are the best asset we have created over the last decade or so. We are committed to further growth and will continue to hire people who share our values, are equally passionate about their career and can exceed our clients’ expectations. We have some exciting plans for 2011 and believe Expand will further evolve and provide something special. The last few years have been interesting, challenging and rewarding, and have taught me a great deal about what it means to run a successful business through a turbulent economic period. The trials and tribulations of everyday business are, however, often offset by the dazzling array of choice of where to eat tonight, where to go, what to see, where’s the next big thing… what a wonderful choice to have to make!

Guest Editor of the Business Section is Samantha Maxwell-Reed of Expand Executive Search in Brighton

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DON’T BANK ON EXTRA HOLIDAY THE ROYAL WEDDING, WITH ITS ADDITIONAL BANK HOLIDAY, IS GREAT NEWS FOR EMPLOYEES. BUT WHAT ABOUT EMPLOYERS? WHAT SHOULD THEY LOOK OUT FOR PARTICULARLY WHEN DEALING WITH PART TIME WORKERS? PAUL GAFF, PARTNER FOR LAW FIRM THOMAS EGGAR LLP IN BRIGHTON, ADVISES BUSINESSES What does all this mean for employers? Well, this depends on the contract of employment, but for the majority of employers, particularly those with full time staff entitled to bank holidays in addition to their normal holiday entitlement, it means very little. Everyone gets the extra day off but employers have to pay for it. For part time staff and for those whose holiday is calculated including bank holidays, things are a little more complex. How should employers deal with this extra bank holiday then? The way you can approach the extra bank holiday depends on your contracts of employment. The basic position is that if your contracts say employees are entitled to at least statutory minimum (5.6 weeks’) holiday, inclusive of bank holidays, you don’t need to give them the extra day. If their contract says that their holiday is in addition to bank holidays, you should give them the extra day (workplace customs may also be relevant, so if these apply to you, you should consider taking advice before denying employees the extra day). If your employees do not have a contract, or the contract is unclear, the safest thing to do would be to give everyone

the extra day (and to take advice about putting contracts in place!). How would this work for part-time workers? The same principles apply for part time employees. If they get at least minimum holiday entitlement (i.e. 5.6 weeks pro-rated) inclusive of bank holidays, then they will not need to receive a pro-rated extra day. If their holiday is in addition to bank/public holidays they will get the extra day (pro-rated or not depending on the contract). Do we have to give all employees the extra bank holiday? No, but from a practical perspective withholding the extra bank holiday (even if you are legally entitled to do so) will mean that you end up with a lot of disgruntled employees. Thomas Eggar 01293 742 739 thomaseggar.com The Royal wedding is set for Friday April 29, and if people take April 26, 27 and 28 off they’ll get 11 days holiday in total (including weekends).

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AFTER A TORNADO HIT A SMALL TOWN IN WEST SUSSEX, BUSINESSMAN KEVIN BYRNE CAME UP WITH AN IDEA TO PROTECT THE RESIDENTS FROM A SECOND DISASTER... THIS TIME A MAN MADE ONE

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n January 1998 a tornado devastated Selsey in West Sussex, causing some £10m worth of damage. The aftermath saw rogue traders from the length and breadth of the country arriving to try and rip off the town’s inhabitants as they struggled to re-build their lives. For Kevin Byrne this became the inspiration behind Checkatrade, the company he set-up later that year to help the British public avoid unscrupulous traders and cowboy builders by providing a free, transparent and impartial directory of trusted tradesmen across the UK. Kevin, a former carpet cleaning business owner, first set up Checkatrade from his garden shed, and since then the company has grown to 62 staff with a turnover of over £4.5m. Today it has over 5,600 trade members who carried out a combined total of £700m worth of work over the last 12 months. Here, the founder and managing director of the company offers us his top business tips:

FIND YOUR PURPLE

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Don’t give up your full-time job. Whenever possible, keep your full-time job and start your business in the evenings and weekends. Building a gradual income stream and giving your fledgling business a chance to succeed without putting your main income at risk has to be sensible - especially in today’s business climate. If you have a flexible employer you might be able to negotiate reduced hours after you get your new venture off the ground, enabling you to take your business to the next level. Effort and passion is not enough, be sure to do your research first. Most weeks I visit a local café which is located at the end of a group of small independently owned shops and businesses. Every two to three months one of these shops closes and another takes its place. These businesses are all set up by eager people who throw all their effort and passion into trying to make them work. It’s sobering to see so many people open the same type of shops that had failed just a few weeks earlier. Whatever your business – regardless of whether it’s operating online or offline, on a local, regional or national level – know the market you are getting into. Research the competition and the needs of the potential market.

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Consider systems, people and results. These three items will determine the scalability of your potential business. For each of these three items, decide for yourself if you should put the word ordinary or exceptional in front of each word. For example, my business is an ‘XOX’. Extraordinary systems operated by ordinary people giving extraordinary results. What I mean by ordinary people is those that don’t necessarily need college and university degrees to fulfil their responsibilities and excel as employees. My XOX business allows me to grow without the need to recruit an expensive workforce that may be difficult to find. If your business was, for example, requiring professionals with qualifications to run accountancy, IT or a legal business your symbols would be XXX. Extraordinary systems operated by extraordinary people giving extraordinary results. XXX businesses are usually slow to grow and hard to duplicate. Consider this against the scenario of OXO. Ordinary systems, operated by extraordinary people producing ordinary results. This type of business has little or no chance of success. This is another one that I came across years ago and it became one of the base principles of how I developed the company. Apply this to your ideas and it will help you identify the scalability of your potential business. Write a business plan. I haven’t met an entrepreneur yet that likes or wants to put a business plan together. However, without one you seriously reduce your chance of success. Most businesses are like a three-legged stool; finance, sales and production. Each of these must be looked at very carefully. Your business plan has to remain flexible, but if you have nothing to aim at you will not hit anything. Focus on the next six months and keep it as simple as possible. Seek a mentor. Fundamental mistakes are made when passion overrides common sense. Having someone who has trodden the path before you will be invaluable. Mentors are hard to come by but most people will know someone who would be able to provide guidance and wisdom. If you find a good one, listen to them.

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second 12 hours. Seriously, to be successful you will have to work hard, very hard and probably long hours to get it off the ground. Find a Purple Cow. Years ago I read Seth Godin’s Purple Cow. A must read. Seth explains that to be ordinary in today’s business climate is just too risky. If you pass a field full of ordinary cows you will not even notice them, but if you saw a purple cow you would stop, take photos and post them on Facebook and Twitter, you’d shout about it and talk about it. Find your purple cow in business, make a superior offer, produce an exceptional product or deliver a service that is ‘off the table’. Go the extra two miles. Going the extra mile is not enough; consumers have too much choice and are often time-poor. When I used to clean carpets many years ago I’d offer to clean the kitchen carpet for free. It would only take me ten minutes but it almost guaranteed that my customer would tell her friends. What can you offer that costs you little but means a great deal to your customers? Keep focused. Whatever you focus on will get bigger and you will move towards the most dominant image before you. If your desire is to have a fleet of vans, get a picture of a fleet of vans and put your company logo on it and pin it to your office wall. If you want your own factory, find a photograph of one and put your company name on it. Few undertake this practice; many never achieve their initial goal. Keep your goal in sight and stay focused on it. Look forward to problems. Your ability to build a business is directly in line with your ability to solve problems. Problems build experience and value, once you have been through a difficult time, the next time it comes around you just step over it. SO checkatrade.com

Don’t build a business, build people. I’m often asked how I built Checkatrade so rapidly and my answer came to me during a presentation one day, “I don’t build business, I build people”. Having time to think on my answer I firmly believe that once you have a business model that has potential you should set about building the people that run your business. The power of appreciation is massive. Make sure your team are well trained and know that they are very much appreciated. To gain commitment from your team they must be involved, to have involvement they have to be given an input into the decision-making processes of the company. This is key. Work half a day. It doesn’t matter which half of the day you work, the first or MARCH 2011

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JAMES CAAN HAS BEEN IN RECRUITMENT MOST OF HIS LIFE AND IS KEEN TO TALK ABOUT HIS NEW BOOK ON GETTING THE RIGHT JOB. FIRST, THOUGH, WE DECIDE TO FIND OUT ABOUT HIS DECISION TO QUIT DRAGONS’ DEN AND HIS CONTROVERSIAL VISIT TO PAKISTAN WHEN HE OFFERED TO BUY A BABY

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WORDS HANNAH STEPHENSON

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Yet he was moved to tears on an emotional visit to Pakistan in the aftermath of the horrendous floods last year and set out to do what he could to help. “It was the most devastating scene I’ve ever come across. When you see entire villages with thousands of people and thousands of homes under water, in a land mass the size of England, the first thing that goes through your mind is, ‘why does this always happen to the poor?’ “Being able to change the life of a human being is, for me, one of the most rewarding experiences I’ve ever had.” Controversy followed when Caan offered to buy a baby girl from a family in a flood-hit village for 100,000 rupees (under £1,000 at the time), an event he clearly regrets. “In this particular village there had been a polio epidemic. Walking around the village, you’re seeing these families with seven or eight children with malnutrition. There’s no water, they’ve lost their homes and are huddled together in a tent. “Then one of the aid workers gives me this newborn child, saying it’s unlikely she’ll survive. You stand there as a parent thinking, this is just not right. In an emotional response, I said, ‘If there’s anything I can do I would love to help you’. I came back determined to find a way to rehouse 1,000 people, to give them back their dignity.”

Today, he simply wants to move on, in particular to discuss his latest timely book, Get The Job You Really Want, which offers advice to jobseekers. “As I’ve been in the recruitment industry all my life, I’ve seen time and time again how ill-equipped people are when they go for interviews.” Being prepared is the crux of the book’s message. Do your research, anticipate and rehearse the possible questions that will be thrown at you, dress the part, learn how to sell yourself, and other sound advice. Unemployment is not something self-confessed workaholic Caan has experienced since leaving school at 16 with no qualifications. Born in Lahore in 1960, his family moved to England when he was a baby and settled in Brick Lane, East London, where his father set up a business making leather jackets. The young Nazim Khan, who later changed his name to James Caan (after admiring the actor in The Godfather) by deed poll, would sell some of the jackets to school pals for a profit. He changed his name initially because he thought it was cool, but it soon stuck. “From an administrative perspective it was easier to change it by deed poll, although it didn’t go down well with my father. “He was clearly disappointed. Like any parent, if you’ve a successful son, you want him to carry the family name.” On leaving school, Caan had a variety of jobs before joining a recruitment firm at 18. At 25 he set up his own agency,

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t’s difficult to imagine business entrepreneur James Caan, who has announced he’s quitting the hit BBC Two series Dragons’ Den, being anything other than calm and measured.

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The time he is devoting to the Pakistan project is one of the reasons Caan, who invested nearly £1 million of his own money in 14 businesses during four series in the den, is leaving the show. “I’m really sad to be leaving. It’s been an incredible part of my life and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed it.” How did the other dragons react to news of his departure? “There’s clearly a sense of disappointment because we all got on quite well.” No mention is made of his spat with Scottish dragon Duncan Bannatyne over Caan’s non-dom tax status which allows the Pakistan-born, but UK-raised, entrepreneur to avoid paying UK tax on offshore earnings. Bannatyne had said this was ‘unfair’. Unlike Bannatyne, who has been pretty vocal about the rift, Caan has kept a dignified silence throughout the furore, aside from reportedly saying that their feud didn’t lead him to quit. He initially posted on his website: “I respect Duncan and his opinions. We are both professionals and I hope we can draw a line under this personal and unfortunate exchange.” Beyond that, he has remained tight-lipped.

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Alexander Mann. In 2002 he sold out to a private equity group for a reported £95 million. Today he has more than 30 companies, is CEO of private equity company Hamilton Bradshaw and Chairman of The Big Issue, but his passion seems to be veering more towards humanitarian interests and less towards moneymaking. After all, the father-of-two could give up work tomorrow without worrying about losing his beautiful North London home, his sumptuous seafront apartment in Cannes, his luxury yacht, personal helicopter or fast cars. Despite his gruelling schedule, Caan says he doesn’t find it difficult to balance his work and family life. “I’ve been married for 28 years now, so we’re a very established couple. My wife, Aisha, has an art gallery and is very passionate about her work. We take a lot of holidays. Last week we came back from Bali. Every month we are in the South of France on our boat for three or four days. We go out for dinner around twice a week. “At home, Sunday morning breakfast as a family is a kind of religion. I spend quality time with the kids and the wife, but it’s a bit more scheduled than normal. I don’t have any down time, as such. Every minute of every day for me is structured. “We just plan a bit more meticulously - for the next three months we have scheduled the time we’re going to spend with the family, birthdays, holidays, trips abroad etc.” Did his daughters, Hana and Jemma-Lia, resent his absences during the week when they were growing up? “We’ve always lived in central London and their lifestyle is as hectic as mine. To this day, I meet both my daughters and we have dinner together one day a week every week, and they pick whatever restaurant they want.” He’s not sure if leaving the Den will mean the end of his TV career, but fame has opened other doors for Caan, who still receives many business proposals as a result of the show. “The most crazy one was when I was driving to Cambridge and we were stuck in a traffic jam on the motorway. The guy in front of me got out of his car, tapped on my window and gave me his business plan. “I thought, how on earth did he know firstly that it was me and secondly, does he drive around the country with a business plan in his car? I took the plan and we invited him in, looked at the business model and decided it wasn’t viable. “But I’ve probably invested in 10 companies outside the Den which I would say are a direct result of it.” Get The Job You Really Want by James Caan is available now RRP £12.99

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James Caan to devote his time to the Pakistan Project

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Help out the hospice Brighton & Hove businesses have found some fantastic ways to support the Martlets Hospice charity, and in the last year alone they raised over £88,000. Fundraising efforts ranged from the extreme – climbing Kilimanjaro, the highest mountain in Africa, to cycling from London to Brighton at midnight. And for the slightly less adventurous - dress down days, raffles, bucket collections and sponsored walks. Groups of employees can get directly involved with volunteering and really enjoy a day out of the office helping out in the hospice garden. The garden is maintained by volunteers so any extra help is very gratefully received.

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They also have a full calendar of events running through the year – a new event is Santa’s Summertime Stride – a Santa dash with a summertime twist on June 25th around Hove Park. The people at Martlets try and make sure events offer something for everyone but are always very happy to support anyone who’s organising an event for them. Whether you need posters, collecting buckets, volunteers or help promoting the event, their fundraising team are on hand to help. For more information about events and supporting Martlets, contact the Fundraising Team on 01273 747 455 or visit themartletshospice.co.uk

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WHAT WHO’S UP TO IN THE CITY?

Churchill Square Inspiration

When it comes to independent retailing on the high street, the last 24 months have proved demanding for many established businesses. However, one local company has decided ‘enough is enough’ when it comes to gloom and doom. W.Bruford have been retailing quality jewellery, watches and gifts in Eastbourne for 125 years and have seen good times and bad. So, when the latest recession hit, company director Ashley Pugh knew exactly what to do. “We wanted to be positive, so we looked at our business and found that customers liked us to be innovative and progressive when it came to watch brands and jewellery collections. With this in mind, we opened a new concept store in the Eastbourne Arndale Centre, with stunning ranges of branded jewellery but still retaining the Brufords classical elegance and style.

Gorgeous gifts Simply the Best are proud to offer a broad selection of high quality, unique speciality gifts. Their hand-picked selection with personalised service sets them apart from everyone else. They have a great selection of classy gifts from British companies; from handmade babygrow cupcakes, to unique hand-crafted pottery by Richard Wilson. His pieces are truly a work of art for any home. Simpatico is a brand of high-end luxury spa scented diffusers, candles and bubble baths from the USA, so why not pamper yourself as Spring arrives? Or there’s Brink, a wonderful line of speciality desk gifts with a big enough selection of ties and socks for that man in your life. Treat him to something

different and fun that he’ll enjoy. Luxury hand embroidered pillows with unique British designs by Jan Constantine will find a special place in your home. And Simply the Best have a great selection of fun party glasses for that special night. As seen on Channel 4’s Chatty Man with Alan Carr these glasses will add colour to any celebration.

“Following the success of this inspirational store, we looked to expand our business and decided the logical approach would be to bring our “Inspired” concept to Brighton’s Churchill Square.” On offer are stunning brands such as: Pandora, Baccarat, Belle Etoile, Dower & Hall, Georg Jensen, Hot Diamonds, Jersey Pearl, Juicy Couture, London Road and Molly Brown. “Inspired by Brufords are proud to be able to bring you an unforgettable retailing experience and we look forward to welcoming you in-store soon.” Visit Brufords at Lower Level Churchill Square, Brighton, call 01273 734 884 or visit inspiredbybrufords.com

There’s also outstanding local canvas art with vibrant colours that represent the best of Brighton. Pop in to the shop at Brighton Square, South Lanes, phone them on 01273 735 816 or see simplythebestbrighton.co.uk MARCH 2011

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WINNING AWARDS

CHANGES LIVES The brighTeST and beST buSineSSeS in The CiTy are lining up To SponSor The 2011 BAHBAs – The brighTon and hove buSineSS awardS

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stablished in 2004, the bahbas recognise and celebrate the excellence of brighton and hove businesses - from the smallest independent retailer to the largest manufacturer or service provider. These businesses all contribute to building the brighton and hove brand and to making ours one of the most exciting cities to live, work and play in. innovation and leadership are considered more important than size or revenue to the bahba judges, who will be looking for companies and organisations that really capture the spirit of brighton & hove. The awards up for grabs include business in the Community, innovation in business, best place to visit, best Customer Service, Most awesome use of digital Media, best place to work, best independent retailer and best place to entertain your Clients. it’s great news that so many businesses are lining up as sponsors to support and promote other local enterprises. and it’s interesting that so many of them are past award winners who realise how valuable entering and winning can be – and who know that the bahbas awards night is simply the best party in town! Jobs gary peters, founder of the recently launched BrightonandHoveJobs.com is sponsoring the best employer award this year. gary won recognition in 2009 for his work in the community as director of iCp Search. he is a born and bred brightonian who has always been extremely proactive within the community, working with several charitable and business-related organisations. he sees sponsorship of the bahbas as another important way of giving something back to the community and an opportunity to turn the spotlight on good employment practices. Meanwhile, his new venture at brightonandhoveJobs.com supports local employers by providing the only jobs board in the country to exclusively support and promote the City where it is based. This focus enables it to ensure that local recruiting is affordable and accessible to all businesses.

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STANMER HOUSE

Places Tourism is important to the City and few people know more about creating unique venues that are also successful businesses than property developer Mike Holland, whose refurbished Stanmer House has become one of the south’s favourite venues for weddings and parties. MIKE HOLLAND There are few days when they are not hosting an event, so clearly Mike and his team know what makes a venue outstanding. Stanmer House is the ideal sponsor of the Best Place to Visit award. Mike says he will be looking for innovation and lateral thinking in creating attractions that bring people into the City. His latest project at the Hove Engineerium involves some of the latest ideas on technology and collaboration with public and private sector organisations. He says of the BAHBAs: “Anything that promotes the City is good news to my mind. The BAHBAs is a great initiative and deserves all of our support.” Customer service With so many jobs involving customer service in Brighton and Hove, be they in call centres like Domestic & General’s or in

our hotels, shops and restaurants, it’s vital that we do it well. No one knows this better than Domestic & General, already a BAHBA winner for recognising the importance of health and well-being in running a business that relies upon staff delivering excellent customer service. So, it’s no surprise that they were quick to grab the opportunity to sponsor the BAHBA for Best Customer Service. HR Manager Nicki Perry says: “We are immensely proud of our own achievements, and are happy to share what we have learned with other local businesses. However, we also know that other local companies are already putting some fabulous ideas into action. We believe that they should be recognised and are delighted to be able to sponsor this award.” The 2011 BAHBAs will be celebrated with a glittering awards ceremony attended by around 500 of the City’s leading and most innovative business people in June. Look out for more news of the BAHBAs and details of how to enter at bahbas.org.uk . Or you can contact the organisers at enquiries@midnight.co.uk SO

NICKI PERRY

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A REAL GEM JEWELLER JEREMY HOYE HAS A REAL PASSION FOR DESIGNING AND CRAFTING CONTEMPORARY PIECES WHICH, OVER THE YEARS, HAVE ATTRACTED THE ATTENTION OF NUMEROUS CELEBRITIES. WE TALK TO HIM, AT HIS SHIP STREET SHOP IN BRIGHTON, ABOUT HIS LATEST COLLECTION Where did you study? I did a Goldsmiths apprenticeship in London for three years, where we were taught many of the dying skills and tricks of the trade. It was a very practical, hands-on approach as we had to start working on precious jewellery from the beginning. Why did you set up in Brighton? I’m originally from Streatham in London. I spent a lot of time in Brighton and Hove as a child with my parents and then as I got older I’d visit at weekends with my friends. I planned to move my workshop from Wimbledon to Brighton when I met my wife Mary. I had always thought that Brighton needed a contemporary jeweller, as when we opened in 1994 all the other jewellers were traditional. Describe your newest collection. Our newest collection is Libertine, which has a defining Jeremy Hoye style. Then we released Pop before Christmas which is a collaboration between the artist Dave Pop who designs the cakes for Choccywoccydooda. Very Brighton and fun. We are also releasing a collection of horse charms which are very fashionable at the moment.

with them. Some stones and beads we source ourselves, however, when we are in Bali and China. What’s your favourite gemstone? I would have to say Tanzanite, which is a beautiful purple and blue stone. It is very rare as there is said to be only around 12 years mining left. If you were allowed to wear just one piece of jewellery, what would it be? My wedding ring for what it symbolises. It is especially precious because it has pieces from my mother’s engagement ring in it. Why do you like making jewellery? I feel privileged to have a creative job. I see it as making little pieces of wearable art. It’s also lovely, of course, to see the smiles on the customers’ faces when they collect their jewellery. jeremy-hoye.com

How long do your pieces take to make? Anything from half a day to 2-3 days, depending on the intricacy of the design and whether there are stones to set. It’s a very therapeutic process, and ultimately extremely satisfying to have a finished product in your hands. Where do you source your gems and diamonds? I have been working with the same gem dealers for around 20 years which is great as you get to build up a relationship MARCH 2011

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CREATING A BUZZ PUBLIC RELATIONS IS WIDELY RECOGNISED AS ESSENTIAL TO THE LONG-TERM SUCCESS OF ANY BUSINESS. WE TALK TO NEW KID ON THE BLOCK ALEX HUNTER ABOUT HIS BRIGHTON BASED COMPANY, PAVILION PR How did you get into PR? I’m passionate about communications and got involved in PR in the ‘90s. I love the diversity of the work which has seen me running a publicity stunt in Trafalgar Square for a recycling company to handling international media crises. What did you do before you founded Pavilion PR? I worked as a freelancer for a number of years for independent PR agencies, SEEDA and the Office of Fair Trading, among others. Why start your own company? Having been a successful independent contractor it’s a natural next step. To put it bluntly, I have seen PR agencies do great work and, sadly, some failing to meet a client’s brief. That motivated me to launch an agency which excels in service. What’s your philosophy on how PR should be done? It’s important to be transparent with clients, to explain what can be done and the best methods to employ. As a communicator I dislike gobbledygook - PR agencies should be honest about what their clients can expect to gain from an effective campaign. Be in no doubt, great PR will create a real buzz whether it’s for a business, an event or a charity! Why is PR crucial to the success of a business? Any business, large or small, should have a PR plan as part of its marketing activity. Steve Jobs of Apple fame once said: “If I was down to my last dollar, I’d spend it on PR.” I can’t put it any better myself.

What do you offer that’s different from the rest? We’re all about getting to know our clients’ needs, not working to our own. Media relations is our bread and butter, but our primary focus is to promote our clients among audiences that are right for them, using a range of methods. We are also offering ‘pop-up’ press office facilities which can be used at events - this means that journalists at an event on the seafront, for example, will know exactly where to head if they want an interview with the organisers. We have also developed a package called ‘Ignite’ for start-ups and SMEs (small to medium enterprises) - people who sometimes make the mistake of thinking PR is a luxury they can’t afford! Why base yourself in Brighton? We have an amazingly diverse range of businesses and activities which make us the envy of other cities. We need to cherish and develop this unique character. I am also thrilled to be able to live here too. pavilionpr.com MARCH 2011

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On

Stage

T H E AT R E S

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OUR ROUND UP OF SOME OF THE BEST NEW STAGE AND THEATRE SHOWS TAKING PLACE IN THE CITY THIS MONTH

Shazia Mirza

As seen on Have I Got News for You (BBC) and The Now Show (BBC), Shazia Mirza’s brand new stand up shows what happens when you don’t follow the obvious path. Where? Komedia, Brighton When? Thursday March 10 Web? komedia.co.uk/brighton

Jimmy Carr

Great Expectations

Peopled by some of his most colourful and memorable characters, the English Touring Theatre promise a powerful and theatrical telling of Dickens’ universally loved novel. Where? Theatre Royal, Brighton When? Tuesday March 29 to Saturday April 2 Web? ambassadortickets.com

The comic’s ninth solo show will be an evening of non-stop jokes, gags and banter. But be warned this is not humour for those of a sensitive disposition! Where? Brighton Dome Concert Hall When? Sunday March 20 Web? brightondome.org

Lady Windermere’s Fan

A sparkling comedy of manners, Lady Windermere’s Fan was first performed in 1892, launching Oscar Wilde’s career as a playwright. Over 100 years later, the story of the aristocratic young wife is still delighting audiences the world over. Where? Brighton Little Theatre When? Tuesday March 8 to Saturday March 12 Web? the-little.co.uk

MARCH 2011

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BRIGHTON & HOVE

Secret

Brighton&

Ho ve

wat er

Walking on MANY CENTURIES AGO THE VILLAGERS OF BRIGHTON BATTLED WITH THE SEA AS STORMS THREATENED THE SETTLEMENT AND CONSUMED THE CLIFF TOP. BUT THE RESIDENTS FOUGHT BACK, AND THE SEA BECAME ONE OF THE CITY’S BIGGEST ASSETS

I

n medieval times, Brighton was a small fishing village which existed solely within the geographical confines of North, East and West Street, with the sea providing the southern boundary. An impoverished place, it had just 2,000 inhabitants by the mideighteenth century. But all this was about to change. The fashion for ‘sea water cures’ during the Victorian era put Brighton firmly on the map. Building work took off, and by 1828 local businessman and politician Thomas Read Kemp had just completed his Kemp Town estate at the Blackrock end of East Cliff. Kemp wanted his development of 92 houses to make him rich (this didn’t quite go to plan – Kemp was forced to leave England eventually in order to escape his creditors). A few decades on, and renowned pier architect Eugenius Birch (who designed the West Pier) had another grand project in mind. He returned from a trip to Bologne filled with visions of creating a magnificent seafront aquarium like the one he’d seen on the continent. But before this underwater world could be built, the construction of a new sea wall and promenade (now Madeira Drive) was required.

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The sea at this time pounded straight on to the cliffs below the fashionable seafront houses (below left), and had to be harnessed.

A process of land reclamation had begun some years earlier when the developers of the Chain Pier (in line with what today is the Madeira Colonnade), built a seawall between the foot of the cliff at the Old Steine and the pier. In the 1830s, William Lambert was contracted by the town authorities to encase the cliff in concrete and hardcore. Lambert’s seawall extended from Old Steine to Royal Crescent. And then of course there was the Kemp Town estate. These aristocratic squares and terraces needed a seafront to suit their grandeur, so the cliff face at Blackrock was encased in brick and stone facings (instead of the cement rendering at Lambert’s end of the cliff). By the end of the 18th century the two walls had met and the whole of the East Cliff was encased against the sea.

Finally, in the early years of the 1870s, a new seawall was built at the beach level, extending the esplanade wall built for the Chain Pier. The facing of the wall used stone from the first Blackfriars Bridge in London which was demolished in 1863. It was on this new seawall, where the sea had previously washed in and out, that Madeira Road was laid out. Its name was later changed to Madeira Drive. The aquarium (pictured above right), was completed in 1872 and was the icing on the cake. With its Italianate building, gothic clock tower and eerie back-lit tanks, it proved hugely popular with visitors. Nowadays of course it’s the Sealife Centre (above left), and although the gothic tower may have disappeared it remains one of the city’s most famous visitor attractions. SO

MARCH 2011

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HAVANA

RESTAURANT & COCKTAIL BAR 32 D uke Street, Brighton

Te l e ph one 01273 773388

w w w. h a v a n a . u k . c o m

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E

BRIGHTON & HOVE

SO BR IG HTO N & HOV E

so

PL TAKEASE E ME

I’M F REE !

BUSINESS CLASS

DRAGON JAMES CAAN GETS FIRED UP ABOUT LEAVING THE DEN

T HE M AGA Z I NE FO R LI FE A ND STYL E

Ha vana f rom C lassic C olon ial t o Ne w C o ol! We br in g yo u a n e w b r as s er ie, ba r an d late n igh t lo un ge in Ho ve.

MARATHON MEN WHY THEY’RE GOING THE EXTRA MILE

EDUCATION TIME

GRESHAM BLAKE PARTY PICTURES

O p e n ing 7t h Marc h 2011

BRIGHTON & HOVE RICHEST APARTMENTS REVEALED ISS UE 9

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FASHION DELIGHTS WITH DENIM

OUR GUIDE TO THE TOP LOCAL SCHOOLS

Havan a S p o on has a n e w lo ok, a n e w Fren c h c h ef, wi t h a n e w m en u th at b uild s on th e Havan a br an d wi th a glam o ro us m o d er n t w is t.

7 0 - 7 2 C hu rc h R o ad, Ho ve BN3 2F D w w w.h a v a n asp o o n .c o.u k 01273 651651

SEASONAL BLUES

MARCH 2011 SOBRIGHTONANDHOVE.CO.UK

LADY GAGA GLOBAL STAR OR JUST SMART PR?

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