Home / Royal Mail / Fencing ruled out as Pavilion Gardens to stay open 24 hours a day – Brighton and Hove News

Fencing ruled out as Pavilion Gardens to stay open 24 hours a day – Brighton and Hove News

A revamp of the Royal Pavilion Gardens in Brighton will include railings rather than fencing and a pledge to keep the historic grounds open 24 hours a day.

The decision underpins a £4.4 million joint application for lottery funding being planned by Brighton and Hove City Council and the Royal Pavilion and Museums Trust.

The plans include refurbishing the public toilets, which are currently closed, and include the creation of a “Changing Places accessible toilet”. Reopening the toilets would be a priority.

And two new statues could go up in the grounds where Brighton comedian Max Miller already stands. Proposals would honour suffragette Mary Clarke and the Indian soldiers nursed at the Pavilion during the First World War.

The grant application follows the reopening of the Corn Exchange and neighbouring Studio Theatre in May after a refurbishment costing almost £40 million, including more than £6 million of lottery funding.

Plans to give the Pavilion Gardens an overhaul have been under discussion for years, with the prospect of fencing off the area having been raised a number of times.

Those in favour of fencing say that it would make the gardens safer, more secure and allow for ticketed events to generate revenue.

Those against say that the public have always had free access to the area and that fencing off the grounds would be a back-door way of shutting the popular café there.

Senior councillors are due to discuss the proposed bid to the National Lottery Heritage Fund at Hove Town Hall tomorrow (Friday 4 August) at a meeting of the council’s Strategy, Finance and City Regeneration Committee.

Council leader Bella Sankey said: “The aim of the project is to ensure our unique and historic Royal Pavilion Garden is a garden fit for a city and that it retains its listed status.

“This plan contains exciting proposals to restore some of the garden’s former glory as well as ensuring maximum use by residents and visitors.

“I’m particularly animated to see plans for a new world-class public toilet including a Changing Places toilet.”

Councillor Sankey added: “I hope this report is agreed by the Strategy, Finance and City Regeneration Committee on Friday so that the bid to the National Lottery Heritage Fund can be made later this month and reach a successful outcome.”

The council said that the proposal involved “plans to redesign and restore the Royal Pavilion Gardens”.

It said: “The plan is to continue to develop the Royal Pavilion Estate as a world-class cultural and heritage site by improving the integration of the Royal Pavilion and Gardens, Brighton Dome, Brighton Museum and Art Gallery, Corn Exchange and Studio Theatre within their historic setting.

“Historic England placed the garden on its Heritage at Risk Register in 2017 and since this time a programme to protect and maintain the garden has been in development.

“Plans include improved footpaths, a new education space, a Changing Places accessible toilet and refurbished public toilets, the reinstatement of historic boundary railings and a new planting plan.

“Without these works being carried out there is the risk that the garden could lose its listed status.”

Bella Sankey

The council added: “Following discussions between the council and Royal Pavilion and Museums Trust, it has been agreed that 24-hour public access to the garden will be maintained.

“To protect its dual function as a palace garden and public park, a strategy to address serious criminal and anti-social behaviour in the garden will be agreed by the council, Royal Pavilion and Museums Trust and other stakeholders.

“Measures might include joint working with the police, increased security, improved lighting and design and expanded CCTV coverage.

“This strategy aims to demonstrate to the National Lottery Heritage Fund that, if it awards grant funding, its considerable investment will be safeguarded and the garden maintained in the future.

“Discussions will also continue about the siting of and potential funding for proposed statues, including a statue of Indian Soldiers who fought in World War I and were nursed in the Royal Pavilion and a statue of suffragette Mary Clarke who was active in Brighton in 1909-10.

A maquette produced in support of the proposed Mary Clarke statue

“These would provide important social context for the Royal Pavilion and its gardens and also create an opportunity for increased community engagement.

“The public toilets in the garden are currently closed as they have been the focus of anti-social behaviour and vandalism.

“Under the plan, they will be replaced with a ‘secure by design’ toilet building to provide a safer environment for visitors. A Changing Places toilet is also part of the bid for funding.

“The council will explore bringing forward the refurbishment of the toilets, including the Changes Places toilet, to achieve reopening as soon as possible.

The Royal Pavilion Gardens public toilets

“Current estimates suggest that the toilets could be brought back into use by early 2025 and before the main project works to the garden start later that year. These timings would be subject to a successful National Lottery Heritage Fund bid.

“In the meantime, the council is considering how to ensure there are adequate toilet facilities for those visiting the garden and will provide further information on this in due course.

“The committee will be asked to agree a contribution of up to £250,000 for toilet refurbishment for the project.”


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