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ONE BEDROOM SECOND FLOOR FLAT
£159,950 LEASEHOLDA one bedroom, second floor flat, recently built with a brand new 90+ year lease with no onward chain.
Initial outlay required: £52,365 -
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TWO BEDROOM FIRST FLOOR FLAT, MODERN BLOCK WITH A BALCONY
LEASEHOLD £210,000A well presented first floor, two bedroom flat in a small modern block. Benefits from a balcony and is within a good distance from a train station and local shops.
Initial outlay required: £72,380
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ONE BEDROOM SECOND FLOOR CONVERTED FLAT
£174,950 SHARE OF FREEHOLDA good sized one double bedroom, 2nd floor (top) converted flat, located moments from Hove station. The property has a modern kitchen and white bathroom and has a very good sized loft space for possible conversion subject to planning permission.
Initial outlay required: £57,015
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The newly built stadium has been named as the best new sporting stadium in the world
Read moreA WINNING DESIGN Winning athletes at the 2012 Paralymic Games will wear medals designed by University of Brighton graduate, Lin Cheung
The 11-times British Paralympic gold medal winner Tanni Grey-Thompson and Ade Adepitan, British wheelchair basketball player, attended the launch of the winning design at the British Museum.Dame Tanni said, ‘Having competed at five sets of Games, the medal was the most important thing. It's what people want to touch afterwards.’ She praised Lin's design, adding: "To have something that looks so beautiful is amazing. You want to win that medal-winning is the most amazing experience. Records come and go but nobody can take that medal from you.’
Lin graduated in 1994 and was one of 100 designers invited by the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games to submit their ideas for the new medals. Her design is based on the wings of Nike, the Greek goddess of victory, and represents ‘Spirit in motion, forward flight, power and lightness’. Lin said she was inspired by ‘the endurance, focus and achievement of elite Paralympic athletes’. The back of the medal depicts the heart of victory, showing the area ‘close to the heart of the goddess’, which was chosen to reflect ‘inclusion and togetherness’.
Lin, who is now senior lecturer in jewellery design at Central Saint Martins, explained, ‘It was important that the medal has layers of meaning’. Her design was taken from a cast of a sculpture of the goddess Nike at the British Museum.
The independent judging panel chose Lin’s design from a six-strong shortlist because her design ‘held a narrative that befitted the athletes' achievements’.
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