was conceived here. if you look around, you can see the castle was built in the 13th century, and this is the courtyard of the castle built by richard, earl of cornwall. if you look further into the distance, you can see it was once connected by land. there is now a bridge. erosion is nothing new here. they have been fighting the elements ever since the castle was built. the reason we are here is because english heritage, the charity that manages most of the castles, forts and walls around england s coastline, are raising the alarm. they are saying they are losing land at an alarming rate due to erosion and climate change. because the sea level is rising, the waves are bigger and hitting the coast harder and the land is disappearing more rapidly. they say they need more money to put in sea
when we proposed it to english heritage, i never thought they d accept. but sometimes, the crazy ideas are actually the best ideas. my name is william matthews and, along with laurent ney and matthieu mallie from ney & partners, we were the engineers and the designers of the tintagel castle footbridge. the footbridge reconnects the two sides of the medieval castle built in the 12th century by richard, earl of cornwall. the mainland ward and the island ward were connected by an isthmus of rock which has since eroded away and the bridge recreates that link between the two sides. one of the key drivers behind the project indeed, it s very raison d etre was to improve accessibility to the site. one of the major problems at tintagel is this incredibly rocky landscape. we wanted to be able to get lots of people here who couldn t get here before. because there were so many steps up to the island, a lot of people couldn t
in particular is all about heritage, history and myth. and the issue is how do you build something and not spoil the magic? when we proposed it to english heritage, i never thought they d accept. but sometimes, the crazy ideas are actually the best ideas. my name is william matthews and, along with laurent ney and matthieu mallie from ney & partners, we were the engineers and the designers of the tintagel castle footbridge. the footbridge reconnects the two sides of the medieval castle built in the 12th century by richard, earl of cornwall. the mainland ward and the island ward were connected by an isthmus of rock which has since eroded away and the bridge recreates that link between the two sides. one of the key drivers behind the project indeed, it s very raison d etre was to improve accessibility
and the designers of the tintagel castle footbridge. the footbridge reconnects the two sides of the medieval castle built in the 12th century by richard, earl of cornwall. the mainland ward and the island ward were connected by an isthmus of rock which has since eroded away, and the bridge recreates that link between the two sides. one of the key drivers behind the project indeed, its very raison d etre was to improve accessibility to the site. one of the major problems at tintagel is this incredibly rocky landscape. we wanted to be able to get lots of people here who couldn t get here before. because there were so many steps up to the island, a lot of people couldn t because they had bad knees, they use wheelchairs whatever it was. now we have essentially step free access right from the car park all the way through onto the site, and it was so satisfying on the opening day to see literally