jmsc
New member
Comet was like going to a clearance warehouse, I think the shop floor was up loads of stairs.
Before it was Comet it used to be the BRS depot.
(British Road Services was the parcel delivery arm of British Railways)
Comet was like going to a clearance warehouse, I think the shop floor was up loads of stairs.
In 1984 Brighton was still largely populated by born-and-bred Brightonians, or at least people from the surrounding area, and definitely felt like a Sussex coastal town - a kind of amplified Hastings, Eastbourne or Worthing.
One of the things that has driven Brightonians out is house prices. In 1987 I bought a flat for £32000, approx three times my wages then. A similar property now would cost around £170000, which is about 6 times the pay of the same grade today.
It was at the front of the TopWank center facing the sea.
We did some support for reggae bands there, but think it was mostly a disco venue ...
We were doing a reggae 'blues party' the night of the bomb, in either 1st or 2nd avenue..
People started drifting iin, talking about a bomb at the Grand...party bubbled.
News filtered in later that Thatcher was still amongst us, and the vibes died a bit, and people headed off home.
In 1984 Brighton was still largely populated by born-and-bred Brightonians, or at least people from the surrounding area, and definitely felt like a Sussex coastal town - a kind of amplified Hastings, Eastbourne or Worthing.
These days it's been invaded by people from all over the country and has become its own little enclave - it's lost a lot of its Sussexness as it's got (simultaneously) richer, more bohemian and - let's be honest - more up its own arse.
I've lost count of the number of Brighton relatives and friends who have moved away since the 80s, in most cases because they can't afford to live there, and in a few cases because they no longer want to.
I think the exodus started long before the 80's. Brighton was starting it resurgence in the 80's as people started to come back and as the students from the 70's started to settle.
Granted it has changed, and mainly due to the student influx, but I think those changes have been positive.
Brighton in the 60's really was a dump. Got the family photos to prove that one. The slum clearances of places like Russell Street tried to address that, but unfortunately the misguided planners of the day erected places like Churchill Square. Buildings like the SS Brighton were torn down and replaced with bland structures, and the rot in terms of inward investment set in. To date, Amex is the only truly global business with significant operations in Brighton (Bupa a recent addition, but not that large).
My view is that with a lack if opportunity and a decaying fabric it was in the 60's that people either moved away or were shipped out to Moulescoomb. The advent of the latter one would have thought might bring prosperity to the Lewes Road, and I do remember the place being a little more buzzy when my Gran lived near there in the 70's, but it's never been that good.
A place that was once worth a visit (and let's hope it is again soon) was the Open Market down London Road. I remember that being alive in the 80's, and my father in law used to travel miles to shop there because of the deals etc. I'm hoping that the new market offers something equally attractive yet different.
I really loved 80's Brighton. As a Shoreham lad (and schooled in Worthing) I'd spend as much of my time in Brighton. I just naturally gravitated here. I think it's always been a town that looks like it is helping the police with its enquiries, and I hope that continues.
You nicked that off keith Waterhouse !
About time....
Glasfryn may have been referring to the shopping facilities in Eastbourne, which frankly are in much need of improvement. We'd have had a new town centre were it not for the EU but that's another argument.
Comet was like going to a clearance warehouse, I think the shop floor was up loads of stairs.
A hotel in your home town is bombed by IRA terrorists and the party ' bubbled' , and the 'vibes died' when you found out that their attempt to murder a democratically elected prime minister of YOUR country ? you really are a treacherous w anker
We were doing a reggae 'blues party' the night of the bomb, in either 1st or 2nd avenue..
I WAS LIVING IN 1ST AVENUE THAT NIGHT,THE GUY IN THE FLAT BELOW WAS BAR MANGER AT THE GRAND AND WENT OFF SHIFT PRIOR TO THE EXPLOSION,JUST HAPPEN TO BE AN IRISH CHAP AND DREW A BIT OF ATTENTION,VERY NICE BLOKE THOUGH.
Wasn't this a live venue?