Personally already travelled to Seven Sisters multiple times, but as a traveller, I haven't yet seriously understood this place and the beauty of this landscape. This place has gathered thousands of people to travel here every single year, but I see that something is changing over and over, which led me to revisit as a student how this place has transformed over the last couple of years from my memory.
The dynamic of the south coast is already heavily infiltrated by the power of nature; the wind and storms blasting the whites of rocks for hundreds of feet started a few centuries ago. On the outside, the houses were fastly built during the 70s, especially in the Seaford beach area, group by group apartments were built after World War II, I started to notice the metaphor over the last century as the economy rose rapidly making the landscape a unique platform owned by nature, as you can hear the nature 'music'. 
 Constantly, slowly inspect the different perspectives and how the picture looks familiar, but it looks to be something new. Frank Golke gave the view to visualise the natural landscape transformed into an industrial site, inspiring the possibilities to understand the nature of capture. As I walked from the west to the east side, the places became more degraded. The cliff has been towards the inland mainland over the past few centuries. I always consider the idea of a glamorous series as why many travel to this location, even in different seasons—the history and stories which remind us of our life and memory.

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