As an architect, he designed a Sainsbury's supermarket in Lewes Road, Brighton.[2]
Politics
Ping served as a councillor at Brighton Borough Council (now Brighton and Hove City Council) for eight years from 1991 to 1999.[3] He became chairman of the council's planning committee and of its licensing committee.[2] Thanks to his unusual name, he achieved national fame after the BBC Radio 2 presenter Terry Wogan used his name as scale against which to compare other interesting names.[2]
He was one of the first openly gay councillors in Britain.[3] He took part in Brighton's Pride events for a number of years.[2] He convinced other councillors to allow gay clubs in Brighton to stay open after midnight.[4]
He was diagnosed with hepatitis C in the late 1990s.[3] He became known locally as the face of southern England's hepatitis C campaign.[5]
Ping died of hepatitis-related liver failure in 2006.[2] His funeral took place at St Margaret's Church in Rottingdean on 20 July 2006,[7] where his gravestone reads '"Architect, Musician and Troublemaker" Arrived late, left too early, d. 3 July 2006'.
References
^Royal Grammar School High Wycombe: School List for Autumn Term 1965
^"Gay campaigner Nimrod Ping dies aged 46". PinkNews. Retrieved 16 January 2017. Mr Ping was one of the first Brighton councillors to come out and defected from the Labour party to the Greens in January of this year.
^Rose Collis, Death and the City: The nation's experience, told through Brighton's history, Hanover Press, 2013, p. 29 [2]