Brighton College is located in Brighton's
Kemptown area, in the east of the city. It is immediately to the east of the site of the former
Kemptown railway station, across Sutherland Road. Its principal buildings are in the gothic revival style by
Sir George Gilbert Scott RA (flint with Caen stone dressings, 1848–66). Later buildings were designed by his pupil and former student at the college
Sir Thomas Graham Jackson RA (brick and flint with cream and pink terracotta dressings, 1883–87; flint with
Clipsham stone dressings 1922–23).
George Bell,
Bishop of Chichester created the school grounds as an extra-parochial ecclesiastical district. Placed outside the parish of
St. Matthew's, Brighton, the school chapel holds an episcopal licence to perform weddings. Under the stewardship of Head Master Richard Cairns, several new buildings were added to the college campus:- • 2008: Alexander Arts Centre • 2011: Skidelsky Building (winner of a RIBA award) • 2011: New Pre-Prep school • 2012: Diamond Jubilee Pavilion (winner of a RIBA award), a new cricket pavilion at the school's fields near East Brighton Park, opened by the
Earl and Countess of Wessex in July 2012. • 2012: Simon Smith Building (winner of a RIBA award) • 2013: New House (winner of a RIBA award) • 2014: Cairns Tower (winner of a RIBA award) • 2015: Music School and Sarah Abraham Recital Hall (winner of a RIBA award) • 2017: Alexander House • 2017: Kai Yong Yeoh Building (RIBA nominee; Sussex Heritage Trust Award nominee) • 2020: School of Sports and Science – a £55 million building, comprising 18 university-standard laboratories, a rooftop running track, swimming pool and double-height sports hall, was designed by the Rotterdam-based
Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA). • 2024: Richard Cairns Building – this building consists of a performing arts centre, the 400 seat 'Cairns Theatre', social spaces and subterranean studios. It completes a 15-year expansion programme and was designed by Dutch architecture firm
krft. == Sister schools ==