Charles Busby was part of an architectural partnership (with
Amon Wilds and his son
Amon Henry Wilds) which gave Brighton much of its character in the 19th century. They met high demand for residential, ecclesiastical and public buildings of all types in the rich, fashionable town by producing elegant designs which combined contemporary architectural expectations with imaginative devices (such as prominent
cornices, bold
bay windows and columns with decorative
capitals) in a distinctively "powerful and assertive" style. Busby has been described as the best architect of the three, having already achieved much by the age of 20. He moved to Brighton in 1822 and joined Amon and Amon Henry Wilds. The
Greek Revival/
Neoclassical church stood at the end of St Margaret's Place, just behind the seafront. Built in 1824, it was one of five
Anglican churches to be constructed in the town in six years—an indication of the growth being experienced at the time. but Amon Henry Wilds has also been identified as its designer. It had a gigantic
tetrastyle portico of
Ionic columns, a
stuccoed façade, a large dome over the
nave and a
cupola. The first service was on 26 December 1824, and the church could accommodate 1,500 worshippers. which was itself about to be altered by the
R. Seifert & Partners architectural firm.
St Margaret's Chapel was demolished in June of that year, and the same firm was commissioned to build a series of exhibition and conference halls topped by a block of flats on the site. Work on the hotel itself started in 1961, followed a few years later by the rest of the redevelopment. The block of flats was given the name
Sussex Heights after the historic county of
Sussex in which Brighton is situated, and work started in 1966. The typical sale price of a two-bedroom flat in 1968 was recorded as £5,950; by 2006 it was £250,000 (£ in ). The
Sussex Ornithological Society rings the chicks each year and has installed a
webcam through which activity in the nest box can be viewed. As of 2010, 40 chicks have been reared. The nest box was threatened with removal in January 2010 when renovation work was scheduled, but this did not happen and the 2010 breeding season produced two chicks. At tall, Sussex Heights is the tallest building in Sussex and the only building in Sussex taller than . It is also the fifth-tallest structure in Sussex, after the
British Airways i360 at tall, the mast at
Heathfield transmitting station at tall, the mast at
Midhurst transmitting station at tall and
Shoreham Power Station at tall. ==Description==