By Zac Sherratt, BBC News, South East • Simon Furber, BBC Sussex
Millions of people pass through Brighton railway station each year, but how many are aware of the secrets below their feet?
Hidden beneath the tracks are mosaic bathrooms, World War Two communication rooms and even a rifle range.
Brighton’s network of underground secrets stretches far across the city, with Victorian sewer systems, a hidden road, and tunnels below the Royal Pavilion rumoured to be built for King George IV to meet his lover.
The BBC has been given special access to this seaside labyrinth to find out what it reveals about the city that lies above.
“Nobody would know this was here,” says tour guide Rob Whitehead, sorting through a ball of keys before unlocking a door from the busy station concourse.
It leads to a staircase that is now grubby but would once have gleamed with shiny, turquoise tiles. Posters informing commuters that the passage will close in 2005 are still on the walls.
Below are the station’s former public toilets, old entrances from Trafalgar Street and a women’s hairdressers – all of which are now storage spaces for the shops above.
Further into the depths of the station, a cobbled road runs alongside its old east wall.
“It was how the old horse-drawn cabs used to get up onto the platform,” says Rob.
A new external wall was added when the station expanded, meaning the road was hidden away.
Brighton Station was built in 1840 but it was not until 1928 that the toilets and now-faded mosaics were added.
Another abandoned space is a former service tunnel deep inside the station, previously used to load goods onto trains but converted during World War Two.
“They moved all the telecommunications for the railway down here,” Rob explains. “If the station was ever bombed, they could still operate from this space.”
But at the far end of the tunnel is the station’s best-kept secret.
“You can hear the gentle rumble of a train above our heads,” says Rob. “It’s a very secluded space, so a rifle range is a perfect use for this space.”
Built for recreational shooting practice in the late 1940s, the range is still used by a rifle club today.
The station was key in connecting Brighton with the rest of the UK. By 1850, it had grown from a fishing village to a hub of more than 60,000 residents and was a tourist hotspot.
Thousands flocked from London as the sea water was rumoured to have healing qualities.
But at the time, sewage flowed from people’s homes into cesspools.
It was not until the late 1800s that engineers built a sewer network sprawling 30 miles (48 km) under Brighton, costing £104,000 – an equivalent of £14.7m today.
It allowed sewage to flow away from homes and out to sea.
The sewers are still operational today, though sewage is treated at a new plant in Peacehaven.
In the 18th century, Brighton had become a popular getaway for the Royal Family. The Royal Pavilion was built in 1787 for the Prince of Wales George IV, who became the Prince Regent in 1811 and King George IV in 1820.
Below the Pavilion is a network of tunnels which had many different uses – from storing dirty laundry to accessing George’s private bedroom.
It was rumoured that King George IV had a tunnel built so he could secretly walk underground to the house of Maria Fitzherbet, his lover.
But Dan Cox, head tour guide for Brighton & Hove Museums, said this is unfounded.
“I’m sorry to disappoint people,” he said. “There was nothing secret about their relationship.”
The King did, however, spend £1,783 – an equivalent of £164,082 today – on a tunnel to keep his servants hidden from the gardens as they went between the Pavilion and the stables, now the popular concert venue Brighton Dome.
“That’s the kind of guy that George was,” said Dan.
Dan added that the team at the Pavilion are still uncovering secrets about the building, meaning some of Brighton’s buried mysteries are yet to be revealed.
Rob Crossan is a partially sighted travel journalist who has travelled the UK visiting his favourite old-fashioned football terraces and taking photographs.He t
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