►
Description
For more information, please visit:
Facebook: http://fb.me/AdurandWorthingCouncils
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/adurandworthing
Website: https://www.adur-worthing.gov.uk
A
So
liz,
thank
you
for
agreeing
to
do
a
slightly
longer
conversation
in
case
people
are
interested.
I'm
I'm
really
keen
to
hear
your
views.
If
we
think
about
the
question
the
assembly's
been
set
about
both
tackling
climate
change
and
supporting
our
areas
to
thrive.
What
do
you
think
the
role
is
of
of
design
in
in
responding
to
that
question?
A
B
B
Comic
relief
noses
are
now
going
to
be
made
out
of
biodegradable
materials,
not
plastic
due
to
one
school
child.
Having
found
a
plastic
nose
from
last
year
and
say,
hang
on
this,
isn't
too
good?
So
if
that's
one
outcome,
it's
really
interesting.
B
I
think
helping
young
people
to
have
a
go
at
design
and
it
could
be
product
design.
It
could
be
landscape
design.
It
could
be
just
designing
the
classroom
to
cope
with
the
new
circumstances.
B
A
Be
more
important
when
we
think
about
urban
design
and
the
the
how
you
know
when
I
think
of
a
a
place,
thriving
it's
people
coming
together
and
it's
kind
of
more
local
areas
being
able
to
respond
to
the
needs
of
the
people.
What
what
is
the
role
that
how
we
design
our
areas
can
have
also
thinking
about
making
those
climate
adaptable?
What
would
you
be
thinking.
B
B
B
This
one's
a
fascinating
one,
lady,
well
fields,
it's
got
cycle
routes
through
it.
You
can
go
quite
fast.
It's
got
meandering
routes
where
you
can
walk.
It's
got
all
the
way
along
at
different
place
spaces,
so
you
can
walk
a
child
for
a
mile.
It's
visited
five
different
natural
place,
spaces.
It's
what's
not!
What's
not
to
like
really.
A
You
said
about-
or
I
don't
know
in
the
presentation
or
or
in
a
conversation
before
about
the
the
image
to
the
right
being
able
to
cope
with
a
water
bomb.
Could
you
speak
about
about
how
we
can
plan
for
that
in
design.
B
Absolutely
I
I
think
the
essence
of
it
is
that
you
have
to
be
prepared
for
the
unexpected
and
to
be
resilient
and
resilience.
These
days
is
going
to
be
more
than
just
going
out
with
your
umbrella
and
putting
your
children
into
wellington
boots.
So
that's
probably
going
to
help
for
90
percent
of
the
time
everywhere
has
just
got
to
prepare
itself
for
the
fact
that
a
month's
rain
could
fall
in
a
couple
of
days
and
where's
the
water
all
going
to
go.
B
They
said
if
you're
going
to
build
4
000
new
homes,
which
they
were
actually
going
to
do,
and
some
of
it
could
be
on
flooded
areas.
It
needed
to
be
done
totally
differently
and
they
came
up
with
a
design
of
a
linear
part
running
right.
The
way
through
bit,
like
the
lady
well
fields,
but
connecting
the
countryside
at
one
end
of
town
to
the
countryside
at
the
other
and
allowing
wildlife,
as
well
as
people,
to
connect
through
all
the
way,
lovely.
A
B
Those
blunts
whale-backed
hills
actually
there's
incredible
scope.
I
was
looking
in
the
design
reviews
that
I
did
in
my
short
presentation.
B
One
was
along
the
coast
where
you
could
connect
people
all
the
way
along
with
shoreline
from
one
end
to
the
other
and
have
beautiful
shoreline
planting
that
was
adaptable
to
these
changes
in
the
climate
coming
in
over
the
years,
so
that
could
be
a
planned
corridor.
People
commute
as
far
as
I'm
told
shawrom
and
brighton
anecdotally.
B
So
why
not
make
the
commute
nice
just
one
little
thing.
I'd
say
about
that.
In
the
stormy
extreme
weathers
extreme
conditions,
you
will
need
footpaths
and
cycle
routes
further
back
from
the
sea.
If
you
look
at
the
design
historically
of
fishing
villages,
you'll
always
find
there's
a
little
tiny
pathway.
We
found
these
in
brighton,
I'm
sure
they
are
in
worthing
as
well.
B
There's
slightly
kinked
pathways
and
very
narrow
they're
there
to
stop
those
prevailing
winds
off
the
sea
from
causing
very
unpleasant
weather
conditions
in
land
they
kind
of
help
people
to
navigate
when
it's
very
windy.
So
you
might
need
cycle
and
footpaths
going
along
parallel
to
the
coast,
but
a
block
back
yeah.
A
And
do
all
these
things
require
complete
redesign
and
sort
of
knocking
things
down
or
what
what
can
we
do?
That
doesn't
feel
like
it's
completely
slash
and
burn
of
everything
and
creating
something:
that's
that's
beautiful
that
and
fit
for
purpose.
What
can
we
do
with
what
we've
got.
B
B
All
its
embodied
carbon
is
socially,
it's
embodied
memories.
Physically,
it's
embodied
carbon
design
wise
some
of
those
embodied
detailing
even
a
brutalist
building.
If
you
actually
go
back
and
discover
as
they've
done,
the
barbican
after
30
40
50
years
of
beautiful
landscaping,
it's
matured
and
it
doesn't
look
brutal
anymore.
B
So
I
think
it
is
nature
has
a
very
good
way
of
softening
things
and
that
that
is
absolutely
about
adaptation.
We
don't
have
to
knock
down
and
do
everything
tomorrow.
I
actually
hate
local
plans
that
do
that.
I
think
all
plans
should
be
very
flexible
and
what's
right
for
this,
video
might
be
totally
wrong
in
10
years.
Time
also
think
design
reviews.
B
So
I
think
it's
a
slow
gentle
adaptive
cumulative
process
also
safe
for
cycling
and
walking.
Copenhagen
didn't
just
say
one
day
right:
okay,
thirty
percent
of
you
are
gonna
go
by
bike.
It
started
with
three
or
four
small
streets,
but
every
year
they
added
three
or
four
small
streets,
sometimes
by
stealth,
particularly
if
the
politicians
change
their
minds,
but
if
you
just
kept
doing
it
and
the
local
communities
kept
being
on
on
stream
with
each
successive
one,
then
you
look
back
over
30
years.
Goodness
me,
half
the
time's
pedestrian
and
cycle
friendly
slowly.
A
B
If
we're
trying
to
be
more
ecologically
responsive
and
we
are
as
human
beings
part
of
the
ecosystem,
then
I
think
that
ability
for
a
designer
to
design
a
bit
of
flex
into
everything
adaptable
buildings,
changeable
circumstances
mean
you've,
got
to
be
able
to
respond
and,
as
we've
discovered
in
the
last
six
months,
sometimes
you
have
to
respond
incredibly
quickly.
B
In
london,
in
the
last
sort
of
six
or
seven
weeks,
probably
more
streets
have
been
given
over
more
street.
Space
has
been
given
over
to
pedestrians
to
diners
to
cycle
routes
than
than
in
the
whole
of
10
years
before
just
like
that.
But
the
key
to
it
is
that
it
isn't
permanent.
It's
going
to
look
be
looked
at
and
it's
going
to
be
reviewed.
B
Some
of
it
won't
work,
and
I
think,
rather
than
endless
consultation
with
people
who
none
of
us
know
quite
how
it's
going
to
work.
Let's
be
honest
and
say
we
don't
know
if
it's
going
to
work
or
not.
Let's
just
do
it
but
know
that
it's
not
going
to
last
forever
if
it's
gone
wrong,
we'll
change
it.
So
I
think
that's
a
very
good,
very
pertinent
and
very
up-to-date
example.
Actually.
B
Just
think
this
idea
of
the
climate
assembly
is
wonderful
and
hopefully
the
idea
will
spread
to
other
coastal
regions.
Thank
you.
Talking
to
chidester.