Bexhill Bed and Breakfast

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Places of interest Bexhill and surrounding

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Tudor style with very comfortable accommodation

Off road parking available

Come and relax in our

first class economic accommodation in a warm friendly welcoming home.

We offer double Rooms with en- suite at £27.50.00 per person per night.

Family rooms available on request, call for pricing. Singles are £35 per room per night. Choice of full English or continental breakfast. We will spoil you for choice.

We have Sky TV and DVD capability in all rooms with a free DVD library available.

Coffee and tea making facilities and free standing fans in all rooms.

Rooms available for the disabled please call for information.

Relax in our very serene peaceful garden with its natural beauty and abundant wild life.

We are a very friendly helpful family who will put above all things our guests comfort and well being. We will try very hard to ensure your stay is a happy and relaxed one. We look forward to meeting you at our Bexhill B&B .

Our house is situated a short walk from the beach.

Please feel free to contact us.

Wir sprechen Deutsch / On parle Francais / Falamos Portugues / Hablamos Espanol

Botfield, 21 Glyne Ascent, Bexhill on Sea, East Sussex, TN40 2NX

Phone: 01424222323

E- mail:

bexhillbedandbreakfast@yahoo.co.uk

First floor en- suite double & family room

Nice view into rear garden.

Thank you for you stopping by

Bexhill is on the A259 road to Emsworth and the A27 road to Southampton, Portsmouth, and Folkestone. Nearby Hastings is linked to London by the A21. The town is served by coastal lines and has three railway stations, including Cooden Beach, Collington, and Bexhill. The railway built by the Brighton, Lewes and Hastings Railway (later part of the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway) arrived on 27 June 1846, although the present station was not built until 1891, when the town had become popular as a resort. A second line, this time built by the South Eastern Railway and approaching the town from the north, was a branch line from Crowhurst via an intermediate station at Sidley to a terminus at BH West. The line opened on 1 June 1902 and closed on 15 June 1964.[11]

The De La Warr Pavilion

The De La Warr Pavilion was the dream of the 9th Earl de la Warr. The Earl drew up a list of ideas for a modern building in Bexhill to be built on the seafront. The criteria was for a light and airy building with clean simple lines to be used as an entertainment venue, restaurant and reading room.

The De La Warr Pavillion was commissioned in 1935 and designed by architects Eric Mendlesohn and Serge Chermayeff. It was the first public building in Britain to be built in the Modernist style, with a revolutionary structure of steel and concrete. The aim of the building was to provide a centre of culture and leisure for the people of Bexhill and the surrounding area. Today the building is Grade 1 listed and widely recognised as a perfect example of the Modernist Movement.

Seventy years on the Pavilion has undergone extensive restoration and now offers visitors a large contemporary art gallery with an exciting arts programme. There is a also a shop specialising in books on art and culture and a café- restaurant.

Other local areas of interest are Eastbourne with Beachy Head in close proximity and Historical Battle where the actual battle of Hastings took place. All reside within East Sussex.