Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2016
Domed rotundas have fascinated and challenged architects and engineers for the last two millennia. Examples can be found throughout the world, most commonly in religious and commemorative buildings, but also in the palaces and bath complexes of ancient Rome and in more recent government and legislative buildings. In modern times technological advances have allowed new and increasingly ambitious kinds of rotunda to be built — markets and exchanges, greenhouses and conservatories, concert and exhibition halls, sports arenas. The roots of this latter development lie in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and one of the pioneering buildings still survives in the unexpected setting of the Royal Pavilion gardens at Brighton.
The Brighton Pavilion has always been mainly associated with two people: George, Prince of Wales (the Prince Regent), who commissioned it, and John Nash, the architect who gave it its present exotic appearance. But it is easy to forget that the most distinctive features of the Nash exterior — the Indian-style domes and minarets — took their stylistic character from a building that was completed before he became involved with the Pavilion. This was the royal stables, designed by William Porden for the Prince, built in 1804–08, and now an arts complex.
1 For ancient and more recent examples, see MacDonald, William L., The Pantheon(London, 1976), p. 33 and passim.Google Scholar
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13 It was finally built in the 1830s as stables for Queen Adelaide, consort to William IV. The site is now occupied by the Brighton Museum and Art Gallery.
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34 The famous illustration to Jeremy Bentham’s description of a Panopticon prison was published c. 1791.
35 The Times, 7 August 1805.
36 RA, 33580–1 (29 June 1805); 33591-2 (23 October 1806); Sussex Weekly Advertiser, 25 August 1806. Saunders was described as ‘late of Oxford Street and Brighton, builder’: Morning Post, 28 December 1805. I am grateful to Sue Berry for this reference.
37 RA, 33591–2, 33593–4.
38 RA, 33662–5 (11 July 1809).
39 The Duke of Newcastle’s famous riding school at Bolsover Castle, Derbyshire, of c. 1630, is 92 ft by 30 ft. For eighteenth- and nineteenth-century riding houses, see Worsley, Giles, ‘A History and Catalogue of the British Riding House’, Transactions of the Ancient Monuments Society, 47 (2003), pp. 47–92 Google Scholar. The Brighton Pavilion riding house is mentioned briefly on pp. 77–78.
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72 I owe this reference to David Beevers. Iron was not necessarily more fire-resistant than thick timber, especially when the timber was coated, or treated with chemicals.
73 Porden’s buildings were repaired at a cost of £7,114 in 1823: Crook, J. Mordaunt and Port, Michael Henry, The History of the King’s Works, VI (London, 1973), pp. 259–60Google Scholar. Good’s drawings are preserved in the Royal Pavilion archives.
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