We use cookies to ensure our site functions properly and to store limited information about your usage. You may give or withdraw consent at any time. To find out more, read our privacy policy and cookie policy.
Manage Cookies
A cookie is information stored on your computer by a website you visit. Cookies often store your settings for a website, such as your preferred language or location. This allows the site to present you with information customized to fit your needs. As per the GDPR law, companies need to get your explicit approval to collect your data. Some of these cookies are ‘strictly necessary’ to provide the basic functions of the website and can not be turned off, while others if present, have the option of being turned off. Learn more about our Privacy and Cookie policies. These can be managed also from our cookie policy page.
Strictly necessary cookies(always on):
Necessary for enabling core functionality. The website cannot function properly without these cookies. This cannot be turned off. e.g. Sign in, Language
Analytics cookies:
Analytical cookies help us to analyse user behaviour, mainly to see if the users are able to find and act on things that they are looking for. They allow us to recognise and count the number of visitors and to see how visitors move around our website when they are using it. Tools used: Google Analytics
Share Our Future Coast on FacebookShare Our Future Coast on TwitterShare Our Future Coast on LinkedinEmail Our Future Coast link
Working with Nature to Safeguard Coastal Communities
Around England's coastline there's an underappreciated ecosystem that provides a home for many native flora and fauna, it might not look pretty, but it stores carbon and crucially it also is a valuable natural flood defence.
In 2021, DEFRA provided £150 million through the Flood and Coastal Resilience & Innovation Programme (FCRIP) to fund 25 projects supporting local areas in becoming more resilient to flooding and erosion. The Our Future Coast project, one of the 25 projects, offers the chance to test a new long-term vision for how we will work with nature to safeguard coastal communities from climate change across the northwest.There are 14 sites across the North West coastline, Hest Bank has been selected as one of these sites.
Here at Lancaster we will be looking at implementing community led designs to regenerate the salt marsh at Hest Bank. Lancaster will be working with a range of partners over this 5 year project, including Morecambe Bay Partnership and Lancaster University. The project will look to provide lessons learned regardingnature-based solutions and their effectiveness at reducing coastal erosion and flooding risk.
Our in person design sessions for 23/24 at both sites have now finished, all updates are published on our website here, if you wish to submit an idea, please use the "Ideas" tab below
Summer Workshops
We will be looking to hold another workshop with Ray from Siskin Asset Management, a specialist in Nature Based Solutions, in September. If you have signed up to our construction mailing list you will be notified, if you haven't and would like to please see our sign ups at the bottom of the page, if not keep an eye onUpcoming events | Morecambe Bay Partnership. We will be looking to install the mechanisms after this workshop!
Newsletter
The Winter 24/25 newsletter can be found here, please note if you sign up to our newsletter that they are only biannual and are only emailed out when published
This project is funded by Defra as part of the £150 million Flood and Coastal Resilience Innovation Programme which is managed by the Environment Agency to develop and test new approaches to resilience tailored to local communities.
Working with Nature to Safeguard Coastal Communities
Around England's coastline there's an underappreciated ecosystem that provides a home for many native flora and fauna, it might not look pretty, but it stores carbon and crucially it also is a valuable natural flood defence.
In 2021, DEFRA provided £150 million through the Flood and Coastal Resilience & Innovation Programme (FCRIP) to fund 25 projects supporting local areas in becoming more resilient to flooding and erosion. The Our Future Coast project, one of the 25 projects, offers the chance to test a new long-term vision for how we will work with nature to safeguard coastal communities from climate change across the northwest.There are 14 sites across the North West coastline, Hest Bank has been selected as one of these sites.
Here at Lancaster we will be looking at implementing community led designs to regenerate the salt marsh at Hest Bank. Lancaster will be working with a range of partners over this 5 year project, including Morecambe Bay Partnership and Lancaster University. The project will look to provide lessons learned regardingnature-based solutions and their effectiveness at reducing coastal erosion and flooding risk.
Our in person design sessions for 23/24 at both sites have now finished, all updates are published on our website here, if you wish to submit an idea, please use the "Ideas" tab below
Summer Workshops
We will be looking to hold another workshop with Ray from Siskin Asset Management, a specialist in Nature Based Solutions, in September. If you have signed up to our construction mailing list you will be notified, if you haven't and would like to please see our sign ups at the bottom of the page, if not keep an eye onUpcoming events | Morecambe Bay Partnership. We will be looking to install the mechanisms after this workshop!
Newsletter
The Winter 24/25 newsletter can be found here, please note if you sign up to our newsletter that they are only biannual and are only emailed out when published
This project is funded by Defra as part of the £150 million Flood and Coastal Resilience Innovation Programme which is managed by the Environment Agency to develop and test new approaches to resilience tailored to local communities.