business for sale rye east sussex

Browse pubs by region Pubs in East Sussex Located in a residential area on the outskirts of Eastbourne and close to seafront. This community pub is known for great value food and drink. Ideal for all the family with separate dining areas, and for meeting friends. It has live sport and entertainment. Located a mile to the north of Uckfield in a semi-rural environment, amongst residential properties, and benefiting from a main road frontage. Large detached local community pub which benefits from passing trade also. The pub is well presented and has traditional features such as open fireplaces, wooden beams and attractive décor and furnishings. Located in the village of Rushlake. Following a recent internal refurbishment this pub is perfectly equipped and in great order throughout. It has a feature bar and open plan trade area, with separate restaurant. Pretty walled gardens with stunning views. Recently re-surfaced car park. Would suit experienced caterer(s). Situated in the town of Polegage, just off the A27, and three miles from Eastbourne.
This is a two bar local community business with a small garden and car park area. It has a broad following, and offers a good range of cask ales. The name derives from the new Zealand and Australian troops who walked the mile from their hospital for rehabilitation in the war. Located on the A2029 just off the main high street of Lewes. This site is popular with live music and cask ale. It has a large central trade area and a sheltered beer terrace. There is scope to develop and grow the catering side of the business. business for sale gawler south australia St Leonards on Seadownload free handyman price list Situated at end of Victorian terrace in St Leonards on Sea. business for sale hermanus
This is a wet led, traditional, two bar pub with up to 35 covers and a double sided bar servery. It has a Victorian garden and is very popular with cask ale drinkers. The property is currently undergoing a redecoration. Located in residential area of Eastbourne on the edge of a shopping centre which is scheduled for redevelopment. The pub has an open plan bar (45), a dance floor and gaming area. Potential exists to grow this business and develop a food offer. handyman service in san jose ca Located in corner site location in the Hanover district of Brighton city centre, surrounded by residential housing and within easy reach of the main city centre. business for sale glebe sydneyThe pub has a well decorated open plan trading area (35), with foldaway stage which hosts popular music acts. business for sale stevenage
The catering kitchen is well positioned for the reintroduction of a good food offer. There is no private accommodation. Located in densely populated area of Brighton, and ideally situated next to Preston Park Station. Currently trading as a wet led pub with sports and gaming this pub has charming period features and a large open plan trading area (40). Great outdoor space and potential letting rooms. Used Cars in East SussexNext open today at 10am. Libraries are closed on Bank Holidays Renew your books – sign in Online reference library – sign in Library enquiries and comments form East Sussex libraries on Facebook Books, audiobooks and DVDs Free computers with Internet access – Please note computers shut down 15 minutes before the library closes Bus pass forms for older people Bus travel discounts for young people Bookends stock for sale Events at the library How to find us Get directions in Google Maps
30 High Street, Rye, East Sussex TN31 7JF Find us on FacebookBeauport - a very special place! With an extended season of 11.5 months, Beauport park is a beautifully landscaped park nestled on a wooded hillside on the outskirts of Hastings - with easy access from the A21. Regarded as one of the most scenic areas in the region, it's a popular choice for both caravan and lodge owners.Your neighbours will include deer, badgers and other visitors to the park - it's a nature lover's paradise! Beauport has a real country club community atmosphere, centered around its friendly bar. Residents can also use the gym, swimming pool and play area. There are 2 golf courses nearby, taking advantage of the terrific scenery and unspoilt nature - plus the Bannatyne Spa Hotel & Health Club next door. With caravan holiday homes for sale from around £14,995 and lodges from around £80,000 your Sussex holiday home could cost less than you might imagine. And with a newly extended 11.5 month season, you can stay as long as you like for almost all of the year!
A warm welcome awaits! We also offer a range of flexible finance packages to assist with your holiday home purchase, to find out more including details on holiday home running costs, view our Payment Options Guide. Arrange your park day visit today or Request a Brochure Free Wi-Fi in Clubhouse Use of Facilities from Neighbouring Park 10 fantastic lakes in the 1066 countryside… something for every angler! Widely regarded as one of the UK's best angling centres. We welcome anglers from beginners to experts! 1066 Target Sports - the UK's Largest indoor Multi-Target sports range is just a stone's throw away. We provide induction, support and guidance to those who wish to experience Target Sports in a controlled and fun environment. We cater for all ages and abilities. Whether you wish to experience throwing an axe, testing your archery skills, target shooting, or live rimfire, it is an absolute must visit!Twentieth-century glassware - tons of it - has been lying unwanted at boot fairs and in junk shops for years, often priced in pence.
The reason why even spectacular vases and sculptural pieces still suffer such treatment is because they rarely bear identifying factory or designer marks. If nobody knows who designed and made it, where's the investment? Be ready for a crush of newly clued-up glass collectors in September, when a guide to popular and available 20th-century glass goes on sale. Miller's 20th-Century Glass, published by Mitchell Beazley, is by Andy McConnell, known for his definitive book on decanters, and recently recruited by the BBC to be the first glass specialist on Antiques Roadshow in the programme's 28-year history. The book plugs one of the last remaining knowledge gaps in affordable collectables. McConnell has collected 20,000 examples of factory glassware over 30 years and research for the book took him and his wife, Helen, on a 5,000-mile trip through the Czech Republic, France, Italy, Denmark, Sweden and Finland, where he trawled the archives of the craft's historic factories. At the Kosta and Orrefors works in Sweden and Holmegaard, Denmark, they were the first visitors to be invited through creaking steel fire doors into strong-rooms containing thousands of sample products and hundreds of thousands of pages of illustrated catalogues.
The result is the first in-depth and priced guide to 20th-century factory glass, whose 2,500 photographs of glassware, most of them previously unpublished, are linked to their factories and designers, both of which are profiled and their role in the evolution of the industry explained. Their names were hitherto little known outside the industry and three-quarters of them - designers and glassworks - are now defunct, many only recently. Ever heard of Hardie Williamson (1907-1994)? He was Britain's most prolific glass designer. You have no doubt drunk beer from his Nonic glasses (the ones which have the bulge near the top) and wine from his Paris goblets. The famous Babycham 'saucer' glass is his design as well. McConnell suggests a nominal value of £5 for those, and £20 for Williamson's 'ripple' water jug (with 10 layers of wavy lines) of 1938, which is doubtless lurking in your kitchen cupboard.But if you are lucky enough to find a long-lost 1937 mould-blown polished fish-shaped dish by Gunnel Nyman, Finland's leading glass designer of the 1940s - rediscovered by McConnell in a set of 1947 publicity photographs in the archive of the Iittala factory near Helsinki - it could be worth £2,500.
And those very Sixties Drunken Bricklayer vases designed for Whitefriars - Britain's oldest glassworks, which was sold for its site-development value in 1980 - by Geoffrey Baxter, the Clarice Cliff of glass design, though hardly a household name in the way hers is, regularly change hands for more than £1,000. Most breathtaking, for me, is the near-incandescent seven-inch Crizzle Stone sculptural vase by the Derbyshire-born former RCA lecturer Michael Harris (1933-1994), estimated at £1,100. Founder of the Mdina glassworks on Malta in 1968, and the Isle of Wight, 1973, Harris emerged as Britain's first studio-glass artist, but rarely signed his work, saying modestly that his entire staff had contributed to its creation. These are just the sort of unmarked, unidentified treasures that tend to fall out of the art market into boot fairs. McConnell deals in glass from his shop, Glass Etc, in Rye, East Sussex, and the prices he quotes in the book are estimated over-the-counter prices arrived at after consultation with fellow dealers at this year's Cambridge Glass Fair.
How much should you expect to pay for 20th-century glassware? McConnell say that most of the 2,500 pieces could still be found for under £100. A voracious hunter bought more than half of them over the past two years for £6,000 - an average per piece of about the price of a pint of beer. Most encouraging example for beginners: the pensioner who visits McConnell's shop weekly with about 50 pieces culled from the charity shops and boot fairs of the Hastings area and leaves with £150 in his pocket.It's the bewildering diversity of the shapes, colours, patterns and sizes on offer. During the 20th century, McConnell estimates, some 4,000 glass designers produced up to a million designs. So even a book as comprehensive as this, he says, cannot be more than an hors d'oeuvre to exploring the field. I felt some comfort when he said that he does not know the precise identity of half the pieces he bargains for. And I got an idea of what he meant when I found myself within yards of Doncaster's Wednesday market, just as it was packing up, and decided to take a punt.
No time to consult the book. I snapped up 21 pieces for a total of £12, almost at random, hoping that, when I got home, the book would identify my treasures. Not one of my mean little hoard of milk jugs, sherbet dishes and pressed glass vases appeared in it. I'm sure that pensioner in Hastings could have done better. On the telephone, however, McConnell said that the green swan-shaped dish was almost certainly Whitefriars - he sells them for £12.50, so I was already into profit! But, clearly, I had got off on the wrong foot. How could I have expected the book, written by a connoisseur of the finest in factory glass, to validate my lack of taste? The secret, of course, is to read the book. Having spent an hour absorbing its illustrations, I ventured into my local charity shop in Wirksworth, Derbyshire, and immediately recognised a Dartington tankard commemorating the Queen's Silver Jubilee in 1977 by Britain's most successful glass designer of the post-war era, Frank Thrower (1932-87).
In the same shop was a pair of Thrower's beautifully simple mould-blown Irish coffee glasses of 1968 with applied handles, his best-selling stemware design. Book value £5 each. I paid 50p each. (Why ever did Irish coffee go out of fashion? I shall make proper use of them). McConnell's book illustrates Thrower's boxed pair of avocado dishes (1971). without box £2 each. Clearly, the mint-and-boxed fetish is spreading. My wife and I own a pair of the dishes, a gift from years ago. What did I do with the box? Like everyone else, I chucked it out. Long unfashionable, classic Dartington, says McConnell, is now as cheap as new Ikea glass, but is tipped as an up-and-coming collectable. Thrower, who created 95 per cent of its ranges until 1987, was a charismatic character, and every one of his plain, classic postwar Scandinavian-influenced designs was made by hand. Some consider Dartington, Britain's sole remaining major glassmaker, to have been, at its peak, on a par with the Swedish Orrefors, the 20th century's most influential glassworks.
Dartington, which now has 110 employees, celebrates its 40th anniversary next year with an exhibition and commemorative book. McConnell's current appetite is for big, colourful, post-war glass. This is where the market is heading and you will probably find that your taste develops in the same way, if you have the space for it at home! His hot tip is the vividly tinted and wacky-shaped vases of the Finnish Riihimaki glassworks (1910-1990). 'It's bold, colourful, daring, diverse and more off-beat than Orrefors,' he says. Glass as an investment? A pension substitute, perhaps? McConnell says: 'Even pensioners can afford to collect 20th-century glass. Should you put your fund in the hands of a City slicker or be master of it yourself? Nothing in this book is going to get any cheaper. All you need is the book, good taste and a retentive memory.' To buy copies of Andy McConnell's 'Miller's 20th Century Glass', at the special price of £30 including p&p call 01903 828503 and quote code MB31.