Littlehampton Museum Little Hampton West Sussex
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littlehampton museum
PICS FROM MUSEUM
Littlehampton Sussex UK
A wander around Littlehampton beach front on a wet morning.
Walks in England: Exploring Littlehampton Harbour
This morning I am taking a stroll along Littlehampton Harbour.
Littlehampton is a seaside resort and pleasure harbour, and the most populous civil parish in the Arun District of West Sussex, England. It lies on the English Channel on the eastern bank of the mouth of the River Arun.
I walk from the end of the harbour wall towards the lifeboat station, early in the morning as the town prepares itself for another day welcoming day trippers and holiday makers.
I am Richard Vobes, the Bald Explorer, exploring Britain. Check out my website at:
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I film with a Gopro and Zyiun Smooth 3 Gimbal, Rode Lavalier and Zoom H4 recorder..
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The Worlds Longest Bench Littlehampton West Sussex
The Worlds Longest Bench Littlehampton West Sussex.
The Longest Bench, Littlehampton
with Arun District Council; Jane Wood and Sophie Murray, East Beach Cafe; Adams Kara Taylor; Jackson Coles; and millimetre
(first phase completed summer 2010)
The longest bench in Britain was opened to the public in Littlehampton, West Sussex on the 30th July 2010. The bench seats over 300 people along Littlehampton's promenade, overlooking the town's award-winning Blue Flag beach.
This project began as an idea to create a very long bench down the spine of the promenade at Littlehampton, potentially the longest bench in the UK or perhaps eventually the world. The structure sinuously travels along the promenade, meandering around lampposts, bending behind bins, and ducking down into the ground to allow access between the beach and the Green.
Littlehampton, West Sussex is a town on the South Coast at the mouth of the River Arun. The promenade runs from the harbour eastwards towards Worthing and beyond. The site follows a redbrick wall which accompanies the promenade for over half a kilometre, terminating at the East Beach Cafe.
The Longest Bench is made from thousands of hardwood bars reclaimed from sources including old seaside groynes (including Littlehampton's!) and rescued from landfill. This simple component is arrayed to accommodate the complex shapes called for by the form of the wall and the activities which take place along it. The varieties of reclaimed timbers are interspersed with splashes of bright colour wherever the bench wriggles, bends or dips.
To inspire and develop the Longest Bench, we worked with Connaught Junior School. The children showed us how they use the promenade, what they think of it, and what it means to them, giving us insights into the site we would never otherwise have. Two important incidents along the length of the site are the two shelters. The children told us they felt these were dirty and unsafe. They were dividing rather than connecting the green and the beach.
The old shelters have been replaced with new Shelter Charms, each made of a strip which forms a simple opening by looping around once. The bronze-finished twisted monocoque forms reach out to both sides, making no front or back. The bench stretches as it approaches a loop and then inside goes a bit haywire, bouncing of the walls and ceiling creating seats and openings. The loop contains the haywire stretch of bench and frames the views each way. These two shelters, along with the East Beach Cafe, form the initial charms.
Platform One Heritage Farm and Railway, Littlehampton
Zak's visit to Platform One during the holidays
Littlehampton beach
Brave chap!
Places to see in ( Rustington - UK )
Places to see in ( Rustington - UK )
Rustington is a village and civil parish within Littlehampton in the Arun District of West Sussex. Rustington is approximately at the midpoint of the West Sussex coast and midway between the county town of Chichester and Brighton. The A259 runs along the north of Rustington, westward to Littlehampton, Bognor Regis and Chichester, and east to Worthing and Brighton.
With a population of over 14,000 in 2014, it has the size and facilities of a small town, including a shopping area with a mix of independent and chain stores. The parish of Rustington includes the neighbourhood of West Preston. Rustington was in World War I home to an American air base, at the east of the High Street.
Rustington contains a conservation area which extends from the south end of North Lane to The Lamb in The Street. Here, where trees are protected, are the largest number of pre-1850 listed buildings in the post town, with The Street and surrounding roads containing some of the finest 17th and 18th century Sussex flint cottages in West Sussex, some of which are thatched.
There is a village information centre at the Churchill Parade car park. Rustington has its own museum, containing artworks and artefacts and a coffee shop, housed in an 18th-century thatched house recently converted for the purpose. Rustington competes annually in the South-East in Bloom competition. It holds an annual carnival and fête in August. Close to Christmas Eve, Rustington has a village carol concert which is free for local residents and features local school children accompanied by the Littlehampton Concert Band.
Rustington adjoins the English Channel, and ranges between 2 metres and 7 metres above Ordnance Datum. It has three main recreation grounds and neither woodland nor fields. Rustington shares Angmering railway station with Angmering and East Preston. Trains from this station go to Brighton and Portsmouth/Southampton, and some to London.
( Rustington - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Rustington . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Rustington - UK
Join us for more :
Margie Expedient Littlehampton 2014
The Expedient Brass Band Play Margie at the Littlehampton bonfire parade, October 2014
Daimler Ferrets @ Littlehampton Armed Forces Day 2013
Daimler Ferrets of the West Sussex Military Vehicle Trust at the Littlehampton Armed Forces Day 2013. More info at sussexmvt.co.uk
Littlehampton Fireworks 2019
Lovely firework display on Littlehampton seafront on 28/10/2019 #Gear360ActionDirector #SamsungGear360
Produced with Gear 360 ActionDirector
West Beach Littlehampton West Sussex England Clip Six 20/06/2017.
Littlehampton Sounds - Youth Music Showcase
Littlehampton Sounds - Youth Music Showcase
Littlehampton Sounds was a showcase of music made by young people in Littlehampton. It featured a guest performance from UK Grime artist EYEZ. It showcased music from the best young vocal artists, bands, producers and beat makers in the Littlehampton area, including acclaimed steel pan group Sussex Steel.
Rhythmix is a charity that provides the opportunity for thousands of young people each year to have the chance to enrich their lives through music.
Find out more: rhythmixmusic.org.uk
Donate today: justgiving.com/Rhythmix
West Sussex Music is a one-stop shop for high quality music education. As the largest provider to children and young people of high-quality music education in West Sussex, West Sussex Music nurtures, inspires and enriches, changing lives through music.
Find out more: westsussexmusic.co.uk
Presented by Rhythmix, thanks to support from Youth Music, West Sussex Music and Freedom Leisure.
Littlehampton Miniature Railway July 2016
The railway reopens with some interesting rolling stock and an industrial engine. Perchance it was not dead but sleepeth when it closed last year.
Koby's Visit To Rustington Museum
Koby films Rustington museum very quickly
*Halogens* Littlehampton Level Crossing, West Sussex
Littlehampton Level Crossing, Littlehampton, West Sussex.
Location: Lyminster Road, Littlehampton
Date Filmed: 12-05-2018
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Trains:
Class 377 (Southern)
Class 377 (Southern)
Featuring:
Joe Thorpe, UK Level Crossing Spotter & Trains
Thanks For Watching!
littlehampton floods june 2012
a mindles no thought for the flood victims scumbag removing sewage contaminated electrical goods from a large skip in littlehampton west sussex on friday afternoon 29/6/2012
A film. On A Sussex Farm (Littlehampton) 1960's
In the 1960's/early 70's a cine film was made of the seasons on the farms of Littlehampton. It was filmed by Littlehampton resident, Reg Dalson. The farmer is John Helyer who was very well known in the town for many years. John's son Neil had the film converted to HD video. The narration was done only recently with John and Neil being interviewed by ex-school teacher Roger Butterworth who, at the time of the interview was working for the Littlehampton museum. The narration is not in perfect sync, but I did my best and added subtitles to assist the viewer. Join us here:
Places to see in ( Alton - UK )
Places to see in ( Alton - UK )
Alton is a market town and civil parish in the East Hampshire district of Hampshire, England. Alton is located across a valley on the source of the River Wey. . The town is famous for its connection with Sweet Fanny Adams.
The town of Alton was recorded in the Domesday Survey of 1086 under the name Aoltone and was notable for having the most valuable market recorded therein. The Battle of Alton occurred in the town during the English Civil War. The town contains three secondary schools and its own railway station.
Alton is between Farnham 9 miles (14 km) to the northeast and Winchester 16 miles (26 km) to the southwest. London is 52 miles (84 km). Nearby Brockham Hill, situated 3.5 miles (5.6 kilometres) northeast of Alton, rises to 225 metres (738 feet) above sea level.
The nearby village of Bentworth is the highest village in Hampshire.
Alton was famous in the 18th century for the manufacture of paper. Alton has businesses in the retail and service sectors in the centre of the town, and over a hundred businesses in the four industrial areas of Mill Lane, Newman Lane, Caker Stream and Omega Park, ranging from light industrial to computer software production.
Alton WordFest is a celebration of the spoken and written word held in late September or early October each year. Alton WordFest has hosted The Pint Pot of Fire - a story-telling competition among champions representing writers' circles, public speaking groups and oral-tradition story-telling clubs from around the area. The Pint Pot of Fire has run annually since 2005 and was formerly held in Guildford (2005) and Farnham (2006–2009).
The Allen Gallery serves as Alton's art gallery. It houses a large, permanent ceramics collection as well as temporary exhibitions.
Holybourne Theatre is on the site of a former Nissen hut that was converted into a theatre by German prisoners-of-war during World War II. Alton Morris was formed in 1979, and have been Morris Dancing both in the United Kingdom and abroad. They often perform at Alton street events.
The Alton Independent Cinema Project was formed in May 2011 to help secure the future of independent cinema in the town. Alton Maltings was renovated in 2004-5 and is now the home of Harvest Church and is used by community groups, charities, private users and other organisations throughout the week. The Alton Maltings claims to be the widest wooden spanned building in Hampshire.
Alton Library was rebuilt in 2005 to a design by the County Council Architects. The new library contains a lending library, reference library, computer facilities and a cafe. The Curtis Museum was founded in 1856 by Dr William Curtis and houses one of the finest local history collections in Hampshire. The Town Gardens contains a bandstand (built in 1935 for the Silver Jubilee of King George V). Anstey Park, is a large open space with playing fields and a small children's playground
Alton station is on the National Rail network at the end of the Alton Line with a service to London Waterloo. Alton railway station also serves as a terminus for the Mid Hants Railway commonly called 'The Watercress Line', a restored steam railway running between Alton and New Alresford, so called because it used to be used to transport fresh watercress to London. The origins of the Watercress Line date back to 1861, the year in which Parliament granted consent for what was then known as the 'Alton, Alresford and Winchester Railway'. Alton used to be a railway junction. As well as the Mid-Hants Railway, from 1903 to 1955 the Meon Valley Railway ran from Alton down the Meon Valley to join the Eastleigh to Fareham line at Fareham. The Basingstoke and Alton Light Railway ran north to Basingstoke.
( Alton - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Alton . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Alton - UK
Join us for more :
Littlehampton Miniature Railway 70th Birthday Celebrations, Sunday June 24th 2018
A great day out on the LMR, at Littlehampton, West Sussex, when steam returned for a weekend to celebrate its 70th birthday.