Union Chapel, Brighton

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

The Union Chapel, also known as the Union Street Chapel, Elim Free Church, Four Square Gospel Tabernacle or Elim Tabernacle of the Four Square Gospel, is a former chapel in the centre of Brighton, a constituent part of the city of Brighton and Hove, England. After three centuries of religious use by various congregations, the chapel—which had been Brighton's first Nonconformist place of worship—passed into secular use in 1988 when it was converted into a pub. It was redesigned in 1825, at the height of Brighton's Georgian building boom, by at least one of the members of the Wilds–Busby architectural partnership, Brighton's pre-eminent designers and builders of the era, but may retain some 17th-century parts. It has been listed at Grade II in view of its architectural importance. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Union Chapel, Brighton
rdf:langString Union Chapel
rdf:langString Union Chapel
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xsd:float -0.1410000026226044
xsd:integer 23109303
xsd:integer 1085658473
rdf:langString Amon Wilds; possible involvement of Amon Henry Wilds and Charles Busby
xsd:integer 16831688
rdf:langString The façade viewed from the southwest
rdf:langString Grade II
xsd:date 1971-08-20
xsd:integer 481384
rdf:langString Elim Tabernacle and attached railings
xsd:integer 1683
rdf:langString Union Street, The Lanes, Brighton, Brighton and Hove BN1 1HA, England
rdf:langString United Kingdom Brighton
xsd:integer 1825
xsd:string 50.8223 -0.141
rdf:langString The Union Chapel, also known as the Union Street Chapel, Elim Free Church, Four Square Gospel Tabernacle or Elim Tabernacle of the Four Square Gospel, is a former chapel in the centre of Brighton, a constituent part of the city of Brighton and Hove, England. After three centuries of religious use by various congregations, the chapel—which had been Brighton's first Nonconformist place of worship—passed into secular use in 1988 when it was converted into a pub. It was redesigned in 1825, at the height of Brighton's Georgian building boom, by at least one of the members of the Wilds–Busby architectural partnership, Brighton's pre-eminent designers and builders of the era, but may retain some 17th-century parts. It has been listed at Grade II in view of its architectural importance.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 17944
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