Cool Place of the day: i360, Brighton

Every day, a new place to discover or explore from coolplaces.co.uk

Martin Dunford
Friday 05 August 2016 18:06 BST
Comments

It’s officially the world’s thinnest observation tower, and opened on Thursday to much fanfare as the latest – and, yes, perhaps even the coolest – addition to Brighton’s patchwork seafront.

Built by the creators of the London Eye, which in the 15 years since it went up has inexplicably become the country’s most popular visitor attraction, they clearly have the same sort of ambitions for this contraption, which occupies an iconic place on the seafront close to where the treasured old West Pier still pokes its remaining rusty girders above the water. This is in effect its replacement – a "vertical" pier, if you like, and as such is a palpable vision of Brighton’s future following the West Pier’s sad and controversial demise.

It’s the same sort of thing as its London cousin, but different – an "eye" but not a wheel, with just the one viewing capsule – 10 times the size of London’s mini pods – in which you make the 160-metre journey to the top. The pod has seating, air-conditioning and is fully accessible, and in the evening there is a bar that will – they say – host music and special events and maybe even make up for visiting on a cloudy evening.

There’s a pre-ride show to take you through the vital statistics of the whole thing and point out what you’ll see from the top, while at the bottom, a restaurant and tea room is open to folk too squeamish (or just too poor) to ride to the top – nope, at £15 a pop it’s not cheap! But, as sponsors British Airways say themselves, there is nothing else quite like this on the south coast. And you know what? For once they may be right.

Cool Places is a website from the creators of Rough Guides and Cool Camping, suggesting the best places to stay, eat, drink and shop in Britain (coolplaces.co.uk)

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in