<P> At the west end of the town centre formerly stood a kinetic water sculpture called the' Rising Universe', colloquially known as' The Shelley Fountain' . It was designed by Angela Conner, and erected to commemorate the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley who was born at Field Place in Broadbridge Heath, near Warnham, two miles west from Horsham centre . The fountain was designed to release a torrent of six and a half tons of water periodically, it was 45 ft across at its base, standing 28 ft high . It carried a plaque bearing one of his poems' Mont Blanc' . </P> <P> The fountain was turned off in the spring of 2006 to save water . Despite recycling it used 180 gallons a day to cover evaporation and filtration losses . However, the council has made water saving efficiencies elsewhere and the fountain was turned on again on 13 November 2006, its tenth birthday but was turned off again after that Christmas . In May 2008 the fountain was turned off again due to the failure of its main hydraulic cylinder . On 19 January 2009 the fountain was fenced off for repairs . It was reopened without the fountain functioning . The fountain was again repaired at the start of March 2011 at a cost of more than £ 30,000 and was removed altogether in June 2016 with cost of upkeep being cited as the main reason . </P> <P> The Parish Church of St. Mary the Virgin is the oldest building in Horsham, having been in continuous use for nearly eight centuries . It is located at the end of the Causeway in Normandy, the oldest extant part of Horsham . It has a peal of ten bells . </P> <P> The earthworks of the eleventh century Horsham or Chennelsbrook Castle can be found near Chennells Brook . </P>

Where did the horsham post office move to