#41: Why Culture Should Be Infrastructure In A Devolved Sussex
The Sussex And The City Podcast
– Episode #41
Why Culture Should Be Infrastructure In A Devolved Sussex
Host: Richard Freeman Guest: Louise Blackwell – producer, cultural strategist and founder of Creative Crawley
🔍 Episode summary
Culture is often treated as the product of a vibrant place, and a thriving economy. A mural here, a festival there, something colourful once the serious work of housing, transport and economic growth has been done.
This episode makes a very different argument.
Richard Freeman speaks with Louise Blackwell, one of the most influential cultural producers working in Sussex, about Crawley, creativity and why arts and culture should be understood as part of the region's civic infrastructure.
Louise grew up in Crawley before building a major national career in the arts, including co-founding Fuel, one of the UK's most respected independent producing organisations. More recently, she has brought that experience back into Sussex through Creative Crawley and Crawley's Creative Playground, securing £millions in funding to help local people shape what culture looks like in their own town.
Together they explore why Crawley matters in the cultural life of Sussex, how culture can improve safety, confidence, belonging and public space, and why devolution creates a rare opportunity to rethink the role of creativity across the county.
This month, it was confirmed in parliament that arts, culture and high street regeneration will become the responsibilities of directly elected mayors and their strategic authorities. So it is timely to discuss power, participation, identity, regeneration, young people, civic pride, and who gets to tell the story of Sussex next, through the lens of devolution.
Read the prospectus for culture in West Sussex co-convened by Louise to focus the mind on the opportunity of devolution. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1xQ_Sh5_Hto34od69HuW2sLKajz3vM-hu/view]
This episode is brought to you in partnership with Wild Purpose.
Wild Purpose helps build stronger communities through nature and intergenerational understanding.
This week is Global Intergenerational Week, which champions meaningful connections between generations across the world. Wild Purpose works across Sussex and beyond, running learning and community programmes that bring adults of all ages together to understand one another, gain fresh perspectives and grow life skills.
Their co-mentoring programme, community connection walks, conversation cafes, and growing and creative allotment sessions are all designed with a collaborative, nature-based ethos.
In a county shaped by coastline, countryside and a strong independent spirit, Wild Purpose asks what becomes possible when we take the connection between people and place seriously.
Find out more at wildpurpose.org [https://www.wildpurpose.org]
🎯 In this episode
Why Crawley deserves a stronger place in Sussex's cultural story How Louise's own Crawley upbringing shaped her career in the arts Why Creative Crawley was created How local people helped identify the town's cultural gaps and opportunities Why murals, festivals and creative activity can be part of civic infrastructure How culture can support safety, pride, belonging and regeneration Why Crawley's diversity, young population and location make it culturally important What devolution could mean for arts and culture across Sussex How cultural strategy can connect tourism, skills, innovation and community life Why Sussex needs to tell a bigger, bolder cultural story
🧠 Key themes
Culture is not an optional extra. It shapes how people feel about where they live, how they use public space, and how communities build confidence and connection.
Crawley has often been underestimated in Sussex's cultural identity, but its diversity, young population, new town heritage and location between London, Brighton and Gatwick give it huge creative potential.
Creative work becomes more powerful when it is rooted in listening. Louise describes how residents, community groups, businesses and local leaders have helped shape Creative Crawley's approach.
Devolution could create new opportunities for Sussex to think more strategically about culture, but only if creativity is understood as central to growth, skills, health, tourism and place-making.
Sussex's cultural story is bigger than the familiar postcard version. It includes Crawley, Worthing, Chichester, Bexhill, Eastbourne, Brighton, rural communities, grassroots festivals, underground music, contemporary circus, youth theatre and creative education.
The challenge is not just to celebrate culture, but to organise it better, resource it more intelligently, and connect it to the places and people who are too often left out of the story.
💬 What Louise says
"There is something going on here, because it's not just me advocating."
"What is missing is places and opportunities for people to come together and for their lives to get better through arts and culture."
"We have such a broad definition of what creativity and culture is."
"Nobody's taking it for granted that arts and culture is valuable. I have to show it by doing."
"Where the money lies is where the power lies."
"It could change the lives of people in Sussex and change the perspective of Sussex as the most exciting cultural destination in the UK."
WANT TO ASK QUESTIONS OF NATIONAL AND LOCAL POWER BROKERS?
Join us for a special online briefing and Q+A on 30 April 2026, 1 - 2.30pm
BOOK TICKETS >> HERE [https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/what-do-we-know-and-where-are-we-going-a-briefing-on-devolution-in-sussex-tickets-1985575294155?aff=oddtdtcreator]
🎧 Production credits
Host: Richard Freeman Guest: Louise Blackwell Sound design / editing / original music: Chris Thorpe-Tracey Production management: Letitia McConalogue
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