History in Structure

The Duke of Yorks Cinema

A Grade II Listed Building in Brighton and Hove, The City of Brighton and Hove

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Coordinates

Latitude: 50.8339 / 50°50'2"N

Longitude: -0.1384 / 0°8'18"W

OS Eastings: 531188

OS Northings: 105471

OS Grid: TQ311054

Mapcode National: GBR JNY.MTJ

Mapcode Global: FRA B6LW.PX9

Plus Code: 9C2XRVM6+HJ

Entry Name: The Duke of Yorks Cinema

Listing Date: 24 November 1994

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1380741

English Heritage Legacy ID: 481065

ID on this website: 101380741

Location: Round Hill, Brighton and Hove, West Sussex, BN1

County: The City of Brighton and Hove

Electoral Ward/Division: St. Peter's and North Laine

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Brighton and Hove

Traditional County: Sussex

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): East Sussex

Church of England Parish: Brighton St Bartholomew

Church of England Diocese: Chichester

Tagged with: Cinema

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Description



BRIGHTON

TQ3105SW PRESTON CIRCUS
577-1/27/689 (North East side)
24/11/94 The Duke of York's Cinema

II

Cinema. Opened on 22 September 1910. Designed by CE Clayton
for Mrs Violet Melnotte-Wyatt. Stucco, brick and cobbles in
mortar to the rear, roof of slate.
EXTERIOR: 2 storeys, 3-window range. Single-storey porch to
the centre, one bay deep and 2 wide, in the form of a
Palladian arcade with ornate, typically Edwardian Ionic
columns and cartouches in the place of keystones, the
pilasters decorated with Rococo ornament; dentil cornice;
parapet with openwork panels between piers, central panel with
segmental cornice and urns on piers. 2 flat-arched entrances
with eared architraves, pulvinated frieze and cornice, the
frieze interrupted in a characteristically Edwardian way by a
rectangular panel. The ground floor either side of the porch
is rusticated, with round-arched openings, now glazed as for
shops; the upper part of the facade has a slightly recessed
centre over the porch with 3 flat-arched windows, now blocked,
having architraves and cornices on consoles, and over each a
less than circular window in an oval Rococo frame with
festoons and drops; modillion cornice; parapet with openwork
panels either side of a semicircular pediment on consoles
framing a clock surrounded by a wreath and scrolling foliage;
the side wings are flanked by rusticated pilasters and have,
from the first floor upwards, an oval oculus, aedicule,
consoles with drops carrying a round-arched archivolt,
modillion cornice and parapet; these wings were originally
crowned by domes.
The left-hand return in Stanley Road is detailed like the
front for one bay; then comes the single-storey auditorium
with 2 flat-arched entrances with architraves and 3 blank
windows, the wall divided into 8 bays; the eastern ends shows
cobble and mortar construction in brick panels, said to
survive from the buildings of the Amber Ale Brewery, formerly
on this site.
INTERIOR: vestibule with cornice, and floor paved with tiles
and terrazzo. The auditorium is a single ramped space; the
proscenium arch has a concave architrave decorated with stars;
the side walls are divided into 6-and-a-half bays by Doric
pilasters which support the ribs of the elliptical-arched
ceiling; the rear one-and-a-half bays contain a gallery,
segmental in plan, and cantilevered out from 4 Doric columns.
The auditorium was redecorated in June 1937, but it may be
that only the proscenium arch and the present gallery date
belong to this period of alteration.
HISTORICAL NOTE: most purpose-built cinemas in Britain dating
from before the First World War were built in 1910-1914,
following the Cinematograph Act which came into force on 1
January 1910; The Duke of York's is thus one of the oldest
surviving, and largely unaltered, purpose-built cinemas in
Britain.
(Carder T: The Encyclopaedia of Brighton: Lewes: 1990-).


Listing NGR: TQ3118805471

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