Seaview is a little Edwardian resort situated on the north-eastern corner of the Isle of Wight, ignoring the Solent. The town is prominent with travelers and also is 2 1/3 miles (3.8 km) from the town of Ryde, where most tourists reach the island by ferryboat or hovercraft. Along with Nettlestone, it forms a civil parish of Nettlestone as well as Seaview. The High Street is vertical to the coast. On the seafront exists the Old Fort club, a drinking place prominent with both residents and summer season site visitors. The Salterns Cottages used to house salt pan employees. One street is called Rope Walk because long areas of rope for rigging ships were laid out there. The popular Priory Bay is about a ten-minute stroll from the village. This stretch of coastline can only be reached at low tide. It is filled with white sand and uses exceptional swimming problems. Additionally, Seagrove Bay, in between the village and Priory Bay, is rather prominent. Some of the biggest houses in the location are along Pier Road and Bluett Avenue, as well as this is partly responsible for the nickname "millionaires methods". Further huge period residences, now mostly split into apartments, can be discovered in Ryde Road. In 1870, Augustus Gough-Calthorpe, sixth Baron Calthorpe, had a French Renaissance design home, Woodlands Vale, built by Samuel Sanders Teulon. The neighboring Calthorpe Road is named after the household. Seaview has lots of holiday residences including some with sea sights. This results in a seasonal variation in the activity in the town - with lots of second-home owners seeing just in the summertime or vacation durations. There are 2 resorts, the Seaview Hotel and also the Northbank Hotel. There is a pub, pizza place, cafe, stationery shop, pharmacologist, Post office, Area grocery store store, Beauty Clinic, seaside clothes shop, biltong shop as well as an art gallery. No Man's Land Fort, previously part of the shore defences and also currently a deluxe home, shows up in the Solent one mile from Seaview. Public transportation is readily available on Southern Vectis bus course 8, which operates between Ryde, Bembridge, Sandown and Newport. St. Peter's Church the village's Church of England church constructed in 1859.