Having recently taken on the role of chairman and honorary editor of the Maritime Engineering journal I would like to begin by thanking my predecessor, Ian Townend, and departing editorial advisory panel members for the time and effort they have put into the successful development and delivery of this publication. They leave the journal in a strong position, with a forthcoming themed issue on open coast morphodynamics in December and papers for the first issue in review. These papers will be available to view ahead of print on the ICE Virtual Library in the coming months.Maintaining the quality of the journal relies upon the continual influx of papers from industry and academia, and prospective authors are encouraged to submit papers on topics where they have research or knowledge to share. The editorial panel is especially keen to publish papers on advanced research that those developing, designing or constructing schemes can begin to utilise, as well as papers on the application of research and new information by practitioners themselves. Bridging the gap between research and its application is a well-recognised challenge, but one that this journal is well placed to help address.The papers presented in this issue of the journal both provide good illustrations of approaches to better understand and tackle some of the challenges that face us at the coast. The paper on shoreline change mapping in the north-west of Spain (Perez-Alberti et al., 2013) delivers a detailed account of the development, application and use of methods to map, analyse and categorise a diverse coast. Based upon a series of factors, susceptibility of each part of the shoreline is determined, which is then used to inform coastal management planning. The authors describe how they have taken account of best practice from both within their own country, and that applied elsewhere in the world, to develop a shoreline management approach for the Galicia region. Karambas et al. (2013) look at the issue of coastal change from a different perspective, providing details of further advances in the numerical modelling of morphological evolution. This describes the simulation of wave propagation, wave-induced circulation, sediment transport and bed morphological evolution in the vicinity of coastal structures -an area that numerical models have in the past struggled to reproduce accurately. Encouraging results are presented showing good correlation between modelled and measured seabed for two quite different situations.Two further articles are included in this current issue, a briefing on the Young Coastal Scientists and Engineers Conference 2012 (Green et al. 2013), and a briefing on research looking at the effects of power washing on concrete durability.Papers at the Young Coastal Scientists and Engineers conference covered a wide range of topics and this briefing reproduces the abstracts from the two keynote lectures and the three presentations judged by the organising committee to be of particular merit. These offer a fascinating insight into the rese...