Original church Plans for the church were drawn up in 1858, and construction took place between 1860 and 1861 to a design by
George Frederick Bodley (whose father had been a doctor in Brighton and a resident of the Furze Hill area of Hove, close to the Montpelier and Clifton Hill districts). Bodley was also working on
St Paul's Church in West Street, Brighton at the time, on an interior alterations project. The design of the exterior was reminiscent of
the Italianate style, in red brick with horizontal bands of white stone and a steeply pitched slate roof. This featured a modest
flèche spire containing a bell recovered from
Sevastopol during the
Crimean War (1854–1856).
Extension The building quickly became too small and, in 1865,
William Burges designed a new church which would incorporate Bodley's building as its two south aisles. The rebuilding was not carried out until 1893, under the direction of Burges's pupil, J.S.Chapple, and took two years. Burges was a contemporary of Bodley; both men were born in 1827. It is not known why a different architect was chosen for the redesign, and the changes reportedly caused Bodley some upset. The exterior decoration of the new building broadly matched that of the original church, consisting of bands of white stone contrasting with dark red brick, but there is a considerable difference in height. The original building's north aisle was demolished, and its remaining structure became the south aisle of the new church. In terms of the church's present arrangement, therefore, the main body and the adjacent north aisle date from 1893, while the south aisle is original. The designs, as originally submitted, showed that a
cloister and a
campanile were planned to be built as well. Inside, additional decoration was to have been made in the chancel, and various additions were proposed for the
sanctuary area. A
predella (altar platform) behind the
altar, a set of
sedilia within the sanctuary area and a
baldacchino above the altar were all shown in the plans. However, none of these proposals were implemented, and no changes took place in this area until around 1900, when architect and interior designer
W. H. Romaine-Walker (1854–1940) provided a marble wall with
Cosmatesque-style decoration between the chancel and the nave, a screen for the chancel itself, a new marble altar (in his wife's memory) and extra marble ornamentation for the sanctuary. A
rood screen and new reredos were also installed at this time. A parish hall was built in 1970 on the site, to the north of the church, where the cloister was originally proposed. ==Architecture and fixtures==