NOTES Courtyard Arts Centre Hereford: Designed by Birmingham based Glenn Howells Architects the arts centre was completed in September 1998. The Courtyard is an architecturally innovative arts complex with a 400 seat main theatre and 130 seat studio space, set in rural and historic Hereford. Tate St Ives: Designed by husband and wife team, David Shalev and Eldred Evans, the Tate's Western Gallery was opened in 1994 to critical aclaim. The building has been designed to be in harmony within the small seaside town, yet is undoubtly both modern and unforgetable. Tate St Ives Phase Two Design by Jamie Fobert will feature a new building above the existing gallery. Over 2 million people have visited Tate St Ives since it opened in 1993. John Venn Building Hereford: The John Venn Building, which has stood in Bath Street since 1933, has been newly renamed the John Haider building. John Haider bought up many of the flats since his arrival in the county in 1970, and also ran the Hereford House Hotel in Coningsby Street. The building, designed by an H E Bettington, was originally built as a place for low income families before being bought up by private investors over the years. Centre City Tower Birmingham: This landmark building prominently located on the corner of Hill Street and Smallbrook Queensway is a 16 storey office building. The Essoldo Bingo Hall Leominster: Once the Clifton Cinema, now Top Ten Bingo, this building is probably one of Leominster's largest in volume. It is highly visible when traveling through this border market town, however I wonder how many people look up to enjoy it's voluptuous curve. De La Warr Pavillion: The De La Warr Pavilion is a Grade One listed Modernist building situated on the coast of Bexhill on Sea, East Sussex. The building is currently closed for major Lottery funded redevelopment and will re-open over the late August 2005 bank holiday weekend. Commissioned by the 9th Earl De La Warr in 1935 and designed by architects Eric Mendelsohn and Serge Chermayeff, the De La Warr Pavilion was the UK‘s first public building built in the Modernist style.