Ad
related to: Where should you visit in Bognor?Find discounts on the best Bognor In England. Tripadvisor helps you spend less. Detailed reviews and recent photos. Know what to expect before you book.
Search results
People also ask
Where should you visit in Bognor?
What to do in Bognor Regis?
Why should you visit Bognor Regis?
Where to see a movie in Bognor?
Is Bognor Regis a good place to live?
Can you take a dog to Bognor Regis Centre?
- Pisces232. Worthing, UK 852 contributions. An excellent experience. Hotham Park is situated in Bognor Regis opposite Butlins holiday camp. We went in the evening to see the lighting exhibition within the trees and bushes.
- Angie B. Harrow, UK23 contributions. Memory Lane in a Museum. No sooner did we enter the museum we were warmly greeted by Anne, who told us about a Halloween activity they we holding.
- t n. 3 contributions. Fruit machine heaven. If you like 1990s and 1980s fruit machines. This for you. Really is exceptional. Like going back in time. A1+++ Review of: Mr P's Classic Amusements.
- jayjayj1554. London, UK 161 contributions. Best place to live. Just retired here and love it.Great place, Great people, so peaceful . Everything you could want.
- East Beach
- Hotham Park
- Bognor Regis Museum
- Marine Park Gardens
- South Downs National Park
- Felpham Beach
- Bognor Regis Pier
- Picturedrome Cinema -Historic England
- Aldwick Beach
- Regis Centre
When it comes to facilities the beach directly east of Bognor Regis Pier is endowed with all you could wish for on a summer’s day. The East Beach is kept spotlessly clean all year round and in the summer has lifeguards, deckchair hire and a row of stands selling ice cream and cold drinks along the promenade. Bognor is moving with the times and ther...
Sir Richard Hotham, the man who founded Bognor Regis as a seaside resort chose this land for his estate at the end of the 18th century. His elegant Georgian mansion is still here and has been turned into luxury flats, while there are elements from the estate around the park, like an icehouse. These tranquil nine hectares have a conservation area, a...
A mine of information on Bognor’s origins and progress, Bognor Regis Museum merits a stop on West Street. With showcases carefully packed into a former house, the museum profiles some of Bognor’s more interesting characters. One, Mary Wheatland (1835-1924), was a bathing machine operator nicknamed “Bognor’s Mermaid” for saving numerous lives in the...
When the sea breezes become a touch balmier in spring you couldn’t ask for a finer place stop on a sunny afternoon than Marine Park Gardens. Next to Aldwick Beach in the west of the resort, Marine Park Gardens is on a long, narrow plot and was laid out in the 1930s. There are formal lawns, flowerbeds full of colour in summer, herbaceous borders and...
The countryside not far north of Bognor Regis is some of the most picturesque in the South of England. Within five miles you’ll arrive at the South Downs, a range of dramatic chalk hills for brisk walls rewarded with awesome views. These rolling downs are covered with verdant grassland grazed by sheep and cattle. Apparently, it wasn’t always this w...
The westernmost beach along the Bognor Regis Promenade is on the waterfront of Felpham, just beyond the Butlin’s camp. Felpham was once a separate village but has been engulfed by Bognor’s post-war expansion. Here you can delight in a classic West Sussex beach with another big spread of shingle divided by a line of wooden groynes. Like all of Bogno...
First constructed in 1865, the pier at Bognor Regis testifies to just how difficult it is to preserve these monuments to the Victorian period. Once more than 300 metres long the pier has suffered a fire in 1974 and been shortened by storms in the mid-1960s and 1999. The 1,400-seater Pier Theatre has been lost, but there’s fine architecture on the l...
When moving pictures arrived at the turn of the 20th century they found big audiences at seaside resorts like Bognor. The cinema for Bognor Regis was installed at the assembly hall, dating to 1886, and a lot of that Victorian architecture survives in the staircase and auditorium. Outside take in the gorgeous iron and glass canopy and its historic s...
Bordered by the promenade and Marine Park Gardens, Aldwick Beach is a short way west of the pier and is a calmer, more residential option to the East Beach. There’s a cafe just behind, which also has a shop where you can buy things like windbreaks and inflatables for children. You’ll also find a parade nearby on Marine Drive so you won’t have to go...
It wouldn’t be a seaside town if there wasn’t a theatre for live music, comedy, musicals, plays and pantomimes at Christmas. The Regis Centre was built in 1980 and contains the Alexandra Theatre, seating 357 and the more compact Little Alex, a studio theatre for 60 spectators. This is the only performing arts centre between Portsmouth and Worthing,...
Jun 16, 2023 · Bognor is a fantastic place to visit for a family break or if you want to enjoy a refreshing weekend. The Bognor Regis Museum, Marine Park Gardens, Hotham Park, Regis Centre and Bognor Regis Pier are just a few of the locations that you can look forward to exploring when you visit.
- Natalie Cooke
Things to Do in Bognor Regis, England: See Tripadvisor's 42,491 reviews & photos of 59 Bognor Regis attractions.
Things to Do in Bognor Regis, England: See Tripadvisor's 43,094 traveller reviews and photos of Bognor Regis tourist attractions. Find what to do today, this weekend, or in October. We have reviews of the best places to see in Bognor Regis. Visit top-rated & must-see attractions.
From the beautiful coastline to shops, restaurants, historical and seaside attractions, there’s plenty to keep you and the whole family entertained in Bognor Regis. Bognor Regis’s proximity to the sea and surrounding nature offer an ideal setting for a wide range of activities throughout the year.
Every visit to Bognor Regis should start with a visit to the free museum (it closes for winter but opens from the end of March until the end of November). It’s just off the seafront, to the right hand side of The Royal Norfolk Hotel and to the west of the Pier.