The owners of an iconic seafront building is offering a second round of guided tours.
Following the sell-out tours during the Brighton Festival in May, Embassy Court will be re-opening the building to the public during Heritage Open Days week from September 8-11.
The tours will start in the striking foyer of the Grade II listed building, in Brighton's Kings Road, before moving on to view a flat and the sunroof terrace with views of the city and beyond.
Tours are led by Stuart Adams, a member of the Friends of Embassy Court and a resident of the building, who has an extensive knowledge of the heritage of the building and its architect Wells Coates.
He will be able to give visitors an idea about what it has been like to live in the building during the restoration works, due to be completed next month.
Visitors will also be given the chance to meet a member of Bluestorm, the freeholder of Embassy Court, who will give information on the recent history of the building and how it was rescued by its leaseholders.
Group sizes are a minimum of ten and maximum of 30 and cost £6 for adults and £4 for concessions. The building is accessible to wheelchairs.
Money made from the tours will go to Bluestorm and the Friends of Embassy Court to be reinvested into the building.
Tours can be booked by calling 07900 312 233.
Situated on the border of Brighton and Hove and facing the sea at the eastern end of the Regency Brunswick Terraces, Embassy Court, built between 1934 and 1936, was one of the first buildings in Britain designed in the Modern style.
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