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Stanmer Park development plans move forward

Plans for a £5.8 million restoration at the heart of Stanmer Park move closer as council submits bid for Stage 2 Heritage Lottery Funding.

Stamner Park

The Stanmer Park and Estate Restoration Project aims to restore around 20 hectares of the park’s landscape, and Grade II listed buildings.

Brighton & Hove City Council is hoping to secure a £3.7 million grant toward the project and plans to cover the remaining costs through match funding and revenue.  A decision is expected in December.

Councillor Gill Mitchell, chair of the Environment, Transport and Sustainability Committee said: “We are very pleased that, after months of working closely with our partners, we have finally submitted our bid for lottery funding.

“This is a one off opportunity to receive nearly £4 million funding to halt the decline of the City’s largest park and create new employment and opportunities for residents and visitors.

“We are now keeping our fingers crossed for the best Christmas present ever – a bright future for Stanmer Park”

Stanmer Park is a working landscape which includes opportunities for many leisure activities, farming, grazing and food growing. It is also home to residents living in Stanmer Village and a base for several businesses, including the council nursery, South Downs National Park Authority offices and community groups and organisations.

In July 2014 the council made two applications for Heritage Lottery Funding for Stanmer Park. They were a ‘Heritage Grant’ application to renovate Home Farm, and a ‘Parks for People’ application to regenerate the Walled Garden and other parts of the Stanmer landscape.

The applications were made as part of a wider, long term plan to restore Stanmer Park. The ‘Heritage Grant’ application was unsuccessful, but the ‘Parks for People’ application resulted in the council being awarded almost £300,000 to develop their proposals.

Since then, council officers have been working with Plumpton College and the South Downs National Park and other organisations (including Heritage England) to prepare a Masterplan for the park and a final application for stage 2 funding to Heritage Lottery Fund/Big Lottery Fund. The plan aims to prioritise restoration and improvement work and develop a long term vision for the estate over the next 10 years.

The Masterplan aims to improve the main entrance and 18th century parkland main and approach to Stanmer House, Walled Garden and Nursery and the adjacent depot area.

This includes:

♦        Restoring the landscape and heritage features

♦        Addressing traffic and parking issues, and improving access to the park

♦        Relocating the council’s City Parks depot

♦        Restoring the Walled Garden Nursery and surrounding area

♦        Delivering horticultural and heritage gardening training and food production

♦        Providing educational and learning opportunities

♦        Explaining the heritage and importance of the Estate

In addition proposals include opportunities for volunteering and training in horticulture, heritage gardening and food production, along with facilities for learning about the heritage of the estate, historic landscape and the South Downs.

Plumpton College has agreed, in principle, to manage and maintain the walled garden on a lease from the council.

The future of all the city’s other parks and open spaces, is currently under discussion as part of Brighton & Hove City Council’s Big Parks and Open Spaces Conversation.

To take part in the consultation and have your say, click here:

Paper copies of the consultation are also available and the submission deadline is October 28.

 

Charles Street raise £1,000 for Rainbow Fund

Chris Marshall the manager of Charles Street and jukebox wizard Ruby Roo aka Rupert Ellick celebrated birthdays in style with a joint party on Sunday (September 4), raising £1,000 for the Rainbow Fund in the process.

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The evening was brilliantly hosted by Lola Lasagne, artists appearing included Stephanie Von Klitz, The Vixens, Rose Garden, Martha D’Arthur, Davina Sparkle, Gabriella Parrish, Kara Van Park, Sally Vate, Mrs Moore and Miss Jason.

Lady Imelda collected £91.75 in a pint glass on her head while singing Memory from Cats – which was doubled by an anonymous member of the audience to £183.50.

£651.53 was collected in buckets by volunteers from the LGBT Community Safety Forum Billie Lewis, Maria Baker and Joanna Rowland-Stuart. The total amount raised was topped up to £1,000 by Chris Marshall on behalf of Charles Street Bar.

The evening was staged-managed by Luke ‘Lola’ Hollaran while Ruby Roo provided lights and sounds.

Special mention to the bar staff who worked their socks off all night and to the door security.

Chris Marshall said: “What an incredible night! I’m not sure where to begin, we do this every year and every year you all manage to surpass all expectations and simply blow me away. Thank you very much to everyone who donated their time free of charge to help us raise the money.”

The Rainbow Fund give grants to LGBT/HIV organisations in Brighton & Hove who provide effective front line services to LGBT people in the city.

Photographs by Jack Lynn

For more information about the Rainbow Fund, click here:

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REVIEW: Relatively Speaking: Theatre Royal

Alan Ayckbourn’s 1967 play takes a deceptively simple idea, stretches to what seems like breaking point, and then incredibly takes it further.

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It’s basically four characters and one misunderstanding; but the writing is so sharp, and the central misunderstanding’s offshoots so brilliantly cultivated, that the play is one of the funniest I’ve seen.

Greg (Antony Eden) is intent on marrying girlfriend Ginny (Lindsay Campbell) but he fears she may be keeping something from him. The big clues that there may be another man include mystery bouquets of flowers, wrong numbers, and a pair of slippers two sizes too big for him under the bed. When he finds a cigarette packet with an address written on it Ginny claims it’s where her parents live, and she’s going to visit them over the weekend. In a grand romantic gesture Greg decides to go down to their country house and ask Philip (Robert Powell) and Sheila (Liza Goddard) for Ginny’s hand in marriage. Unfortunately, Philip and Sheila aren’t Ginny’s parents.

As the play unfolds it’s like some incredible high-wire act: it can only work by characters not asking certain questions and giving a fair number of ambiguous answers to the questions that are asked. Yet despite the sheer impossibility of what we’re seeing, it never feels forced and the audience never feels that Ayckbourn is cheating. Slowly some characters realise what is happening and then quickly have to alter their behaviour as they work out how best they can further their own ends.

All the performances are spot-on. Powell achieves a certain magnificence when he has to in effect answer the same question differently to three people at the same time. His confused ‘Yes! No! Yes!’ perfectly shows his confusion, despair and a certain bewilderment that’s he’s in the mess he’s in.

It’s probably worth mentioning that Relatively Speaking is based almost entirely around themes of infidelity and mistrust. However, it’s not as jaundiced as Ayckbourn’s later work though perhaps this is because, at some level, it doesn’t feel quite real. So much so that when one of the characters attempts to blackmail another into resuming an affair it seems an acceptable plot machination rather than something sinister and unpleasant.

The publicity shot on the theatre’s website showing Powell and Goddard chuckling in the direction of a newspaper as they eat breakfast made me very wary with its vague atmosphere of a mediocre ’70s sitcom. Don’t let it put you off as this really is a magnificent comedy.

Continues at the Theatre Royal, Brighton until Saturday 10.

For more details and tickets click here.

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