Princes House, Brighton

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Princes_House,_Brighton an entity of type: Thing

Princes House (formerly Norwich Union House) is an office and residential building in the centre of Brighton, part of the English coastal city of Brighton and Hove. The prominently sited building, an example of Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel's "inimitable response to Modernism", was purpose-built as the headquarters of the Brighton & Sussex Building Society, forerunner of the Alliance & Leicester. The office was later used by Norwich Union, another financial institution, and now houses a restaurant and flats. The steel-framed structure is clad in red bricks with inlaid mosaicwork, forming a carefully detailed façade, and the corner elevation has an arrangement of brickwork and windows which suggests "the pleated folds of a curtain". The building is listed at Grade II for its architectural an rdf:langString
rdf:langString Princes House, Brighton
rdf:langString Princes House
rdf:langString Princes House
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xsd:integer 1935
rdf:langString Brighton & Sussex Equitable Permanent Building Society
rdf:langString The building from the west-southwest
rdf:langString Grade II
xsd:date 1994-11-04
xsd:integer 1380623
rdf:langString Norwich Union House
xsd:integer 250
xsd:integer 166
rdf:langString United Kingdom Brighton
rdf:langString Location within central Brighton
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rdf:langString Princes House (formerly Norwich Union House) is an office and residential building in the centre of Brighton, part of the English coastal city of Brighton and Hove. The prominently sited building, an example of Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel's "inimitable response to Modernism", was purpose-built as the headquarters of the Brighton & Sussex Building Society, forerunner of the Alliance & Leicester. The office was later used by Norwich Union, another financial institution, and now houses a restaurant and flats. The steel-framed structure is clad in red bricks with inlaid mosaicwork, forming a carefully detailed façade, and the corner elevation has an arrangement of brickwork and windows which suggests "the pleated folds of a curtain". The building is listed at Grade II for its architectural and historical importance.
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