Lower Brook Street

The shop at the corner of Tacket Street and Lower Brook Street is aquite a distinguished landmark. 'PRICE', the boot and shoe seller occupied this attractive building for many years and the lettering integrated into an upper balustrade on both faces commemorates this. The building has since been a restaurant or bar.
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Incidentally, the decorative moulding, replete with scantily clad nymph close to the Lower Brook Street sign (above). More recently painted white/cream than shown in this shot, presumably when it became Ollie's Bar, it's certainly more noticeable:

It's just down the road from The Unicorn in Orwell Place and not far from the Symonds sign in Upper Brook Street.
Then a little further down Lower Brook Street on the same side there's the little-noticed, but quite impressive, entrance to 'THE SUFFOLK VICTORIA NURSING INSTITUTE'. The awning leading from the front pillars to the door bears the incised name and, very prominently, the date 'AD1903' in a terra cotta tablet above it.

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It is only a short walk from here down Lower Brook Street, right into Kilo Drive, accross Turret Lane into Rose Lane. Here is a piece of industrial architecture (photographed in 2001) which had a facelift in 2003 as a companion building to the rebuilt Brights furniture shop on St Nicholas Street (close to a very pristine-looking Victorian, multi-sided pillar box).
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The recessed circular plaque set so very high up in this very narrow lane reads: 'D.B 1862' (no second full stop after the 'B'). The photograph of the cleaned up version above shows the extended new building behind. The convex traffic mirrors have been reaffixed at right of the fascia, however they appear to be cross-eyed ...

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Copyright throughout this site belongs to Borin Van Loon, 2003.

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