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  • Pevensey Scarecrow Festival: Elizabeth Beeney: I wish those who choose to spoil this festival by damaging the scarecrows would be more respectful

  • BUSINESS POST OF WEEK: Castle Inn, Pevensey Bay: VLTGE: Mykee-D on the voice last night

  • Kiss me quick, we have the local food scene licked: Pevensey Foodie Heaven launches Bank Holiday Sunday August 25

  • LATEST ON JOBSBOARD: Part time staff, Royal Oak and Castle Inn, Pevensey

  • WEEKEND FEATURE: Local Pevensey Bay based musician, Peter Barron, review. latest album, 'Retro Activ'

  • SMUGFEST SATURDAY 17 AUGUST: UPDATE: The wonderful Jane is now performing (solo act and also known as one part Two Hep Cats)

  • Bexhill 60s Revolution: Saturday 13 July: Biggest town-wide 1960s event in the UK

  • Step into summer with 1066 Country: Official tourism news for Hastings & 1066 Country

  • New internal wayfinding signage installed at Eastbourne District General Hospital

  • About Bexhill 60s Revolution: Saturday 13 July 2019

  • East Sussex County Council: Residents warned to be on their guard against new scams

  • Big welcome to Aquafest 2019: Saturday 24 August, live music charity event, nine bands from noon to night at the Aqua Bar in Pevensey Bay

  • Langney Shopping Centre £6.5 million extension takes shape

  • EVENTBOARD: Castle Inn, Pevensey Bay, latest updates

  • Beach Tavern development, Pevensey Bay: After two and a half years, site rots in front of our eyes and Wealden Council does nothing

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THIS WEEK Bexhill 60s Revolution: Saturday 13 July: Biggest town-wide 1960s event in the UK


COMMUNITY Pevensey Dog Show: Report to Pevensey Parish Council outlines success of first event


JOBSBOARD Part time staff, Royal Oak and Castle Inn, Pevensey

Sam Nightingale is a recognised authority on the history of modernist architecture in seaside towns, here he gives his account of the unrealised ‘utopian dream’ of some architects working between the Wars with new ideas about homes, hotels and public buildings. Sam is available for photographic commissions and can be contacted here.

Forgotten Futures: modernist architecture of the british seaside town is an on-going body of work concerned with producing a typology of modernist (circa 1930’s) architecture found in British seaside towns.

Many of the buildings, included in Forgotten Futures, were built as part of a social and political utopian dream. The dream of a certain type of future that was hoped for was largely unrealised and in many cases these buildings have been left to deteriorate or at best have become forgotten.

Like the typologies produced in the 1930’s by the German photographer August Sanders, Sam Nightingale, in a way, is also producing portraits – portraits of buildings. Each subject’s character implicit in its façade, bearing testimony to a complex history embedded within.

Oyster Bungalow, Pevensey Bay, Martin & Saunders

‘OYSTER’ BUNGALOW
location:
Pevensey Bay
original purpose:
holiday home
designer / architect:
Martin & Saunders Limited
built:
1937 – 1939

Sam Nightingale is a professional photographer who works with a variety of commercial clients in different sites and situations to produce high quality images for publication and documentation purposes. Commissions undertaken by Sam Nightingale include providing photography for; educational establishments, research reports, workshops, business plans and book launches.

image credit: Sam Nightingale
Sam Nightingale: Forgotten Futures: modernist architecture in british seaside towns