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Coordinates: 50°48′58″N 0°06′40″W / 50.81611°N 0.11111°W / 50.81611; -0.11111
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[[Image:Lewes Crescent a.jpg|thumb|Lewes Crescent and its private gardens.]]
[[Image:Lewes Crescent a.jpg|thumb|Lewes Crescent and its private gardens.]]


'''Kemp Town''' is a 19th Century residential estate in the east of [[Brighton]] in [[East Sussex]], England, UK. Conceived and financed by [[Thomas Read Kemp]] it has given its name to the larger [[Kemptown, Brighton|Kemptown]] region of Brighton.
'''Kemp Town''' is a 19th Century residential estate in the east of [[Brighton]] in [[East Sussex]], England, UK. Conceived and financed by [[Thomas Read Kemp]] it has given its name to the larger [[Kemptown, Brighton|Kemptown]] region of Brighton. The majority of the original estate is now demarcated by the modern Kemp Town Conservation Area as defined by the local authority, [[Brighton and Hove City Council]]<ref>[http://www.brighton-hove.gov.uk/sites/brighton-hove.gov.uk/files/downloads/conservation/ca-a4-kemp-town%2Blogo_08.pdf Kemp Town Conservation Area]</ref>.


The estate was designed by [[Charles Busby]] and [[Amon Henry Wilds]] and constructed by [[Thomas Cubitt]]. Building work started in 1823 on [[Arundel]] Terrace, [[Chichester]] Terrace, [[Lewes]] Crescent and Sussex Square. Chichester Terrace incorporated the earlier Chichester House. In 1837 Thomas Kemp fled the country to escape his creditors. The project continued under Cubitt with the support of the [[Frederick William Hervey, 1st Marquess of Bristol|Fifth Earl of Bristol]]. It was completed in 1855, with Sussex Square larger than [[London]]'s [[Grosvenor Square]] and at the time the biggest housing [[Crescent (architecture)|crescent]] in Britain. The original estate is a good example of [[Regency architecture]].
The estate was designed by [[Charles Busby]] and [[Amon Henry Wilds]] and constructed by [[Thomas Cubitt]]. Building work started in 1823 on [[Arundel]] Terrace, [[Chichester]] Terrace, [[Lewes]] Crescent and Sussex Square. Chichester Terrace incorporated the earlier Chichester House. In 1837 Thomas Kemp fled the country to escape his creditors. The project continued under Cubitt with the support of the [[Frederick William Hervey, 1st Marquess of Bristol|Fifth Earl of Bristol]]. It was completed in 1855, with Sussex Square larger than [[London]]'s [[Grosvenor Square]] and at the time the biggest housing [[Crescent (architecture)|crescent]] in Britain. The original estate is a good example of [[Regency architecture]].
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==External links==
==References==
{{reflist}}
* [http://www.kemptown.org/history/ Detailed history of Kemptown]
* [http://www.kemptown.org/history/ Detailed history of (all of) Kemptown]


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Revision as of 23:20, 18 March 2015

Lewes Crescent and its private gardens.

Kemp Town is a 19th Century residential estate in the east of Brighton in East Sussex, England, UK. Conceived and financed by Thomas Read Kemp it has given its name to the larger Kemptown region of Brighton. The majority of the original estate is now demarcated by the modern Kemp Town Conservation Area as defined by the local authority, Brighton and Hove City Council[1].

The estate was designed by Charles Busby and Amon Henry Wilds and constructed by Thomas Cubitt. Building work started in 1823 on Arundel Terrace, Chichester Terrace, Lewes Crescent and Sussex Square. Chichester Terrace incorporated the earlier Chichester House. In 1837 Thomas Kemp fled the country to escape his creditors. The project continued under Cubitt with the support of the Fifth Earl of Bristol. It was completed in 1855, with Sussex Square larger than London's Grosvenor Square and at the time the biggest housing crescent in Britain. The original estate is a good example of Regency architecture.

At around the same time, Brighton's neighbour Hove was expanding on the western boundary of Brighton, with the development of the Brunswick Estate which featured similar though smaller Regency-style properties, and its own market, police station, riding school and (as in Kemp Town) small mews streets for staff housing. These mews now provide very attractive private accommodation which can fetch similar prices to flats in the grand houses they once served.

Below and to the south of Kemp Town, at beach level, is now Brighton Marina and a proposed redevelopment at Black Rock, site of a former lido.

References

50°48′58″N 0°06′40″W / 50.81611°N 0.11111°W / 50.81611; -0.11111