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Tucked away between the busy port of Crosby and the quieter expanse of Hightown, Brighton-le-Sands occupies a distinct strip of the Sefton coastline. It grew largely as a late-Victorian residential suburb, intended as a high-quality retreat for Liverpool's professional classes, and it still retains that sense of solid, red-brick permanence. Geography is the defining feature here; the neighborhood sits right behind the coastal dunes, offering immediate access to the beach and the northern end of Anthony Gormley’s *Another Place* iron men. Unlike the more commercial centres nearby, life here feels anchored by the sea air and the prevailing winds off the Irish Sea. It’s a practical spot for getting around, too, with the Blundellsands & Crosby railway station providing a direct link into Liverpool Central, while the local parade offers the essential everyday amenities without the noise of a through-traffic town centre. It’s a place where the landscape - the changing tides and the views across to the Wirral and North Wales - matters just as much as the bricks and mortar.