"We need to make things. You're not going to solve the world's problems by new moving numbers from one screen to another, you know, in banking," he says. "You can't have an impact on society if you just have a brilliant idea and then turn that brilliant idea into a viable business." He adds: 'If we, the privileged are not worrying about sult solving the world's Problems, we don't expect anyone else is going to'
With the climate crisis mounting, cycling is often touted as being part of the solution for how we can make our cities less congested, more green and generally more pleasant places to be. The unmistakable silhouette of a Brompton bike, first created by Andrew Ritchie in the late 1970s, fits many of the credentials crucial to helping solve today's transport and mobility challenges and yet the company’s unique folding design has been a favourite for citydwellers for decades. It’s now the subject of a new book: The Brompton: Engineering for Change, written by Brompton CEO Will Butler-Adams and the book's co-author financial journalist Dan Davies. Will recently joined our host Rosamund Urwin of the Sunday Times to tell her about the Brompton story.
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