Normans Bay Beach - PHOTOGRAPHER COMMENT
This panorama was taken in early November 2008 and shows the shingle beach at Normans Bay on a stormy autumnal morning. At the end of the row of houses is a small row of beach huts.
Normans Bay Beach - FURTHER INFORMATION
Normans Bay Beach - Pevensey visitor guide showing a virtual tour of 'Normans Bay Beach' linked to an interactive map with local and travel information. 360° panoramas from East Sussex.
Normans Bay lies between Eastbourne and Hastings on the south coast of England, just a little east of Pevensey. This is a small coastal hamlet, whose main feature is a large caravan park, which can be seen on the satellite view of the Google map. The bay is named after the Norman invasion in 1066 as their fleet landed nearby.
The shingle for the beach at Normans Bay comes from the constant erosion of Beachy Head at Eastbourne, and during Norman times was under water. This shingle beach may be under threat if sea levels change again in the future. Behind the beach are the low lying Pevensey Flats, a marshy area full of wildlife and birds and prone to flooding.
TRAVEL DIRECTIONS AND GETTING THERE
Normans Bay is about 7 miles from Eastbourne. Take the A22 and A259 to Pevensey Bay and then take Coast Road to Normans Bay.
Train: Normans Bay Station
















