Timeout today looks at the changing face of one of Brighton’s most iconic areas – The Lanes.

Not to be confused with the North Laine (which starts in Bond Street and includes all roads and twittens north to Trafalgar Street), The Lanes is made up of a labyrinth of narrow alleyways lined with independent shops and cafes.

The Lanes were fully laid out in 1792, excluding Duke’s Lane – an arcade of shops we believe to be pictured above – which would have been constructed in 1979.

Do you remember what Ship Street looked like before Duke’s Lane was put in?

Or can you confirm this is indeed Duke’s Lane?

We also feature Meeting House Lane, which forms the northern boundary of The Lanes.

Within it is Paul Goble Antiques, a family-run business with almost 30 years’ experience dealing in period and antique jewellery.

Has anybody bought any jewellery from Mr Goble or his family?

Tucked away on the edge of the Lanes, in East Street, is the oldest restaurant in Brighton – English’s.

Only the freshest and finest seafood has been served on this site for over 150 years, before English’s took over in 1945.

Here we see it as simply an oyster bar, though it has since evolved, with the restaurant having fed celebrity diners from Charlie Chaplin to Dame Judi Dench – as well as regular Brighton residents – a range of traditional and contemporary seafood dishes.

Finally, one of the oldest and most historic buildings in Brighton, The Pump House.

The pub dates from at least 1776, when it was bought by a Miss Elliot, whose initials still mark the stone fireplace of the bar more than 240 years on.

It has fed and watered countless pub goers since. Have you been one of them?