Brighton and Hove’s architecture firms have received an unusual helping hand through the recession – from Libya.

Construction projects in the oil-rich North African state have boomed since the end of UN sanctions in 2003 and designers from the city have emerged as the favoured choice.

They have been commissioned for a string of major developments, including mosques, schools and hotels, which have kept jobs secure in Brighton and Hove as the UK economy collapsed.

The unlikely link was originally forged by LCE Architects, based in Western Road, Brighton, the firm behind Brighton’s Jubilee Library.

It has since spread to involve Camillin Denny, based in New England Street, and DRP Architects, the firm behind the refurbishment of the Birdcage Bandstand.

Nick Lomax, LCE’s managing director, said: “It started in 2002, when we had a Britishtrained Libyan architect working for us who suggested we should look into possibilities there, so we did.”

Since then growth in Libya has been rapid, with the state now able to utilise the wealth from its oil and gas resources.

In the past eight years Mr Lomax’s 55-strong practice has designed a series of buildings in Libya, including a central mosque, ten faculty buildings for the Al Fateh University in the capital Tripoli and the prototype for new schools to be built across the country.

Mr Lomax said: “There are fantastic opportunities there, some exciting work, and it has been good for our practice. We couldn’t have predicted the credit crunch would happen but now it seems it was a very good decision.”

Camillin Denny, which has recently unveiled plans for a redevelopment of Medina House on Hove seafront, has worked on a series of Libyan projects since 2006.

They include a new heritage museum and university buildings in Tripoli as well as master plans for town redevelopments and a beach resort on the Mediterranean.

Director Mark Camillin said: “It has helped us to survive the downturn. We employ 40 architects in Brighton and we’ve managed to keep going because of the work there.

“There is a strong tie between Brighton and Libya. A lot of Libyans come here to learn English and have a lasting like of the city.”

He added that while the economies of Abu Dhabi and Dubai had faltered, slowing the number of projects taking place there, Libya remained financially strong.