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Patch collective

Making spatial interventions, designing ephemeral events and curating intimate discussions about the built environment from the lens of the diaspora

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SET 91’s Open Series continues this April with ‘A PATCH Sunday Salon’, an exhibition and live programme led by PATCH, an interdisciplinary collective working across architecture, art and research.

Bringing together works by the collective and its members, the exhibition explores diasporic experiences of the city and considers how architecture can be understood through alternative, community-led lenses.

Alongside the exhibition, the evening includes a live talk and Q&A, as well as a conversational salon returning to questions of home and holding space, asking how diasporic communities can be centred within fast-paced metropolitan environments in ways that are tangible, supportive and meaningful.

This session is free to attend, open to artists, architects, spatial practitioners and those interested in the intersections of community, identity and the built environment.

Date: Sunday 12 April
Times: 4.30-7pm
Location: SET 91, Tabernacle Street, Old Street

🔗 Book your free spot on Outsavvy via the link in bio.

**As places are limited, we kindly ask that you only book if you are able to attend so that others who would benefit from the session are able to take part.

If you can no longer attend, please cancel your ticket and contact us at ninetyone@setspace.uk so the space can be offered to someone else.**

Photo credits: Courtesy of the @patch_collective_


43
1 months ago


SET 91’s Open Series continues this April with ‘A PATCH Sunday Salon’, an exhibition and live programme led by PATCH, an interdisciplinary collective working across architecture, art and research.

Bringing together works by the collective and its members, the exhibition explores diasporic experiences of the city and considers how architecture can be understood through alternative, community-led lenses.

Alongside the exhibition, the evening includes a live talk and Q&A, as well as a conversational salon returning to questions of home and holding space, asking how diasporic communities can be centred within fast-paced metropolitan environments in ways that are tangible, supportive and meaningful.

This session is free to attend, open to artists, architects, spatial practitioners and those interested in the intersections of community, identity and the built environment.

Date: Sunday 12 April
Times: 4.30-7pm
Location: SET 91, Tabernacle Street, Old Street

🔗 Book your free spot on Outsavvy via the link in bio.

**As places are limited, we kindly ask that you only book if you are able to attend so that others who would benefit from the session are able to take part.

If you can no longer attend, please cancel your ticket and contact us at ninetyone@setspace.uk so the space can be offered to someone else.**

Photo credits: Courtesy of the @patch_collective_


43
1 months ago

SET 91’s Open Series continues this April with ‘A PATCH Sunday Salon’, an exhibition and live programme led by PATCH, an interdisciplinary collective working across architecture, art and research.

Bringing together works by the collective and its members, the exhibition explores diasporic experiences of the city and considers how architecture can be understood through alternative, community-led lenses.

Alongside the exhibition, the evening includes a live talk and Q&A, as well as a conversational salon returning to questions of home and holding space, asking how diasporic communities can be centred within fast-paced metropolitan environments in ways that are tangible, supportive and meaningful.

This session is free to attend, open to artists, architects, spatial practitioners and those interested in the intersections of community, identity and the built environment.

Date: Sunday 12 April
Times: 4.30-7pm
Location: SET 91, Tabernacle Street, Old Street

🔗 Book your free spot on Outsavvy via the link in bio.

**As places are limited, we kindly ask that you only book if you are able to attend so that others who would benefit from the session are able to take part.

If you can no longer attend, please cancel your ticket and contact us at ninetyone@setspace.uk so the space can be offered to someone else.**

Photo credits: Courtesy of the @patch_collective_


43
1 months ago

Featured in this weeks @bigissueuk - one of five of the @thedavidsonprize longlisters!

Ahead of the deadline tomorrow please do vote for WearWork in the People’s Choice awards.


21
1
1 years ago

Reinventing industrial heartlands as self-sustaining, self-building neighbourhoods arranged around convivial yards

WearWork, by CARD Projects, PATCH Collective, and Maria Mc Lintock. @katiefisher__, @card.projects, @mariaemclintock, @system.of.systems, @bettsbubbles, @patch_collective_

Vote for your favourite entry to win #TheDavidsonPrize People's Choice Prize via our link in bio, supported by @Humaniseorg

16.8 million people in the UK live in old industrial towns where industries like coal, steel, and shipbuilding have declined, shedding thousands of jobs.

Sunderland's industrial downturn has left communities like Millfield behind. One of the city's most deprived wards, it faces high unemployment, low life expectancy, and a rental rate nearing 50%. Yet, with a quarter of residents born outside the UK, it remains a place of movement, adaptation, and potential.

WearWork proposes a new model of housing production, embedding mass material manufacturing within communities. On disused land along the River Wear, waste is transformed at scale into high-quality building components, creating an economy that values labour and time over capital. Industries invest directly in the housing and livelihoods of their workforce, funding the production of both materials and homes. These homes are held in a worker-owned trust, for long-term affordability and community stewardship. Residents shape their homes, gaining equity through time and effort rather than traditional finance.

Read more and see every featured idea on our website!


53
1 years ago

Reinventing industrial heartlands as self-sustaining, self-building neighbourhoods arranged around convivial yards

WearWork, by CARD Projects, PATCH Collective, and Maria Mc Lintock. @katiefisher__, @card.projects, @mariaemclintock, @system.of.systems, @bettsbubbles, @patch_collective_

Vote for your favourite entry to win #TheDavidsonPrize People's Choice Prize via our link in bio, supported by @Humaniseorg

16.8 million people in the UK live in old industrial towns where industries like coal, steel, and shipbuilding have declined, shedding thousands of jobs.

Sunderland's industrial downturn has left communities like Millfield behind. One of the city's most deprived wards, it faces high unemployment, low life expectancy, and a rental rate nearing 50%. Yet, with a quarter of residents born outside the UK, it remains a place of movement, adaptation, and potential.

WearWork proposes a new model of housing production, embedding mass material manufacturing within communities. On disused land along the River Wear, waste is transformed at scale into high-quality building components, creating an economy that values labour and time over capital. Industries invest directly in the housing and livelihoods of their workforce, funding the production of both materials and homes. These homes are held in a worker-owned trust, for long-term affordability and community stewardship. Residents shape their homes, gaining equity through time and effort rather than traditional finance.

Read more and see every featured idea on our website!


53
1 years ago

Reinventing industrial heartlands as self-sustaining, self-building neighbourhoods arranged around convivial yards

WearWork, by CARD Projects, PATCH Collective, and Maria Mc Lintock. @katiefisher__, @card.projects, @mariaemclintock, @system.of.systems, @bettsbubbles, @patch_collective_

Vote for your favourite entry to win #TheDavidsonPrize People's Choice Prize via our link in bio, supported by @Humaniseorg

16.8 million people in the UK live in old industrial towns where industries like coal, steel, and shipbuilding have declined, shedding thousands of jobs.

Sunderland's industrial downturn has left communities like Millfield behind. One of the city's most deprived wards, it faces high unemployment, low life expectancy, and a rental rate nearing 50%. Yet, with a quarter of residents born outside the UK, it remains a place of movement, adaptation, and potential.

WearWork proposes a new model of housing production, embedding mass material manufacturing within communities. On disused land along the River Wear, waste is transformed at scale into high-quality building components, creating an economy that values labour and time over capital. Industries invest directly in the housing and livelihoods of their workforce, funding the production of both materials and homes. These homes are held in a worker-owned trust, for long-term affordability and community stewardship. Residents shape their homes, gaining equity through time and effort rather than traditional finance.

Read more and see every featured idea on our website!


53
1 years ago

Reinventing industrial heartlands as self-sustaining, self-building neighbourhoods arranged around convivial yards

WearWork, by CARD Projects, PATCH Collective, and Maria Mc Lintock. @katiefisher__, @card.projects, @mariaemclintock, @system.of.systems, @bettsbubbles, @patch_collective_

Vote for your favourite entry to win #TheDavidsonPrize People's Choice Prize via our link in bio, supported by @Humaniseorg

16.8 million people in the UK live in old industrial towns where industries like coal, steel, and shipbuilding have declined, shedding thousands of jobs.

Sunderland's industrial downturn has left communities like Millfield behind. One of the city's most deprived wards, it faces high unemployment, low life expectancy, and a rental rate nearing 50%. Yet, with a quarter of residents born outside the UK, it remains a place of movement, adaptation, and potential.

WearWork proposes a new model of housing production, embedding mass material manufacturing within communities. On disused land along the River Wear, waste is transformed at scale into high-quality building components, creating an economy that values labour and time over capital. Industries invest directly in the housing and livelihoods of their workforce, funding the production of both materials and homes. These homes are held in a worker-owned trust, for long-term affordability and community stewardship. Residents shape their homes, gaining equity through time and effort rather than traditional finance.

Read more and see every featured idea on our website!


53
1 years ago


Reinventing industrial heartlands as self-sustaining, self-building neighbourhoods arranged around convivial yards

WearWork, by CARD Projects, PATCH Collective, and Maria Mc Lintock. @katiefisher__, @card.projects, @mariaemclintock, @system.of.systems, @bettsbubbles, @patch_collective_

Vote for your favourite entry to win #TheDavidsonPrize People's Choice Prize via our link in bio, supported by @Humaniseorg

16.8 million people in the UK live in old industrial towns where industries like coal, steel, and shipbuilding have declined, shedding thousands of jobs.

Sunderland's industrial downturn has left communities like Millfield behind. One of the city's most deprived wards, it faces high unemployment, low life expectancy, and a rental rate nearing 50%. Yet, with a quarter of residents born outside the UK, it remains a place of movement, adaptation, and potential.

WearWork proposes a new model of housing production, embedding mass material manufacturing within communities. On disused land along the River Wear, waste is transformed at scale into high-quality building components, creating an economy that values labour and time over capital. Industries invest directly in the housing and livelihoods of their workforce, funding the production of both materials and homes. These homes are held in a worker-owned trust, for long-term affordability and community stewardship. Residents shape their homes, gaining equity through time and effort rather than traditional finance.

Read more and see every featured idea on our website!


53
1 years ago

We are delighted to have made the longlist of the Davidson Prize 2025!

Our proposal WearWork seeks to reinvent industrial heartlands as self-sustaining, self-building neighbourhoods arranged around convivial yards.

WearWork proposes a new model of housing production, embedding mass material manufacturing within communities. On disused land along the River Wear, waste is transformed at scale into high-quality building components, creating an economy that values labour and time over capital. Industries invest directly in the housing and livelihoods of their workforce, funding the production of both materials and homes. These homes are held in a worker-owned trust, ensuring long-term affordability and community stewardship. Residents shape their homes, gaining equity through time and effort rather than traditional finance.

450 live/work homes, public workshops, and studios form a self-sustaining neighbourhood, arranged around convivial yards - crucibles for industry and social life. Taking cues from vernacular bastle houses and Wearside maisonettes, homes become sites of experimentation and innovation, feeding into a circular economy where feedback refines materials and design over time.


96
2
1 years ago

We are delighted to have made the longlist of the Davidson Prize 2025!

Our proposal WearWork seeks to reinvent industrial heartlands as self-sustaining, self-building neighbourhoods arranged around convivial yards.

WearWork proposes a new model of housing production, embedding mass material manufacturing within communities. On disused land along the River Wear, waste is transformed at scale into high-quality building components, creating an economy that values labour and time over capital. Industries invest directly in the housing and livelihoods of their workforce, funding the production of both materials and homes. These homes are held in a worker-owned trust, ensuring long-term affordability and community stewardship. Residents shape their homes, gaining equity through time and effort rather than traditional finance.

450 live/work homes, public workshops, and studios form a self-sustaining neighbourhood, arranged around convivial yards - crucibles for industry and social life. Taking cues from vernacular bastle houses and Wearside maisonettes, homes become sites of experimentation and innovation, feeding into a circular economy where feedback refines materials and design over time.


96
2
1 years ago

We are delighted to have made the longlist of the Davidson Prize 2025!

Our proposal WearWork seeks to reinvent industrial heartlands as self-sustaining, self-building neighbourhoods arranged around convivial yards.

WearWork proposes a new model of housing production, embedding mass material manufacturing within communities. On disused land along the River Wear, waste is transformed at scale into high-quality building components, creating an economy that values labour and time over capital. Industries invest directly in the housing and livelihoods of their workforce, funding the production of both materials and homes. These homes are held in a worker-owned trust, ensuring long-term affordability and community stewardship. Residents shape their homes, gaining equity through time and effort rather than traditional finance.

450 live/work homes, public workshops, and studios form a self-sustaining neighbourhood, arranged around convivial yards - crucibles for industry and social life. Taking cues from vernacular bastle houses and Wearside maisonettes, homes become sites of experimentation and innovation, feeding into a circular economy where feedback refines materials and design over time.


96
2
1 years ago

Negroni Sbagliato Talks - We invite you to join PATCH and our esteemed panel guest to delve into how people are doing spatial criticism differently.

Introducing the speakers:

Architectural Designer & Visual Artist Rayan Elnayal alongside Civil Engineer and DJ Heba Tabidi’s response to resist the structures and institutions that govern the built environment profession in the UK is Space Black. The studio explores underrepresented and under resourced ideas in the built environment. Together they imagine alternative spatial futures for marginalised communities though Concept Design & Research , Education & Culture.
@spaceblack__


24
1 years ago

Negroni Sbagliato Talks - We invite you to join PATCH and our esteemed panel guest to delve into how people are doing spatial criticism differently.

Introducing the speakers:

Siraaj Mitha is a Architect, Director of Accelerate At Open City, Postgraduate Design Tutor at the London School of Architecture.

Through multiple disciplines his work aims to ensure underrepresented students have the same opportunities as their more privileged colleagues in accessing the profession. His work addresses ways the profession might enact processes of reform to level the playing field in a profession which has historically been shrouded in exclusivity and class bias.
@siraajmitha

Tickets still on sale! Come hold space with us for a night where we discuss criticism with some of the most forward thinking in the field! This event is not to be missed!!


63
1
1 years ago

Negroni Sbagliato Talks - We invite you to join PATCH and our esteemed panel guest to delve into how people are doing spatial criticism differently.

Introducing the Speakers:

Krish Nathaniel is an architectural designer, writer and researcher.

Alongside working as an urban designer in London, Krish serves as architect-in-residence at a number of London-based adventure playgrounds and is an Associate Lecturer on the MArsh Architecture course at Central Saint Martins.

Krish’s research focuses on the spatiocultural dimensions of autonomy and augmentation within urban and rural settings, using the tools of free play as a research methodology. This work is often explored through writing and making, exposing spatial conditions and lesser known histories.
@krish.nathaniel

Tickets still on sale! Come hold space with us for a night where we discuss criticism with some of the most forward thinking in the field! This event is not to be missed!!


32
1 years ago


Negroni Sbagliato Talks - We invite you to join PATCH and our esteemed panel guest to delve into how people are doing spatial criticism differently.

Introducing the speakers:

Shumi Bose is a lecturer, curator, and editor based in London. She teaches at Central Saint Martins, Royal College of Art and the Architectural Association, and has worked as curator at the RIBA and at the Venice Biennale.

In 2020, she founded Holding Space, and is happy to share any stories from within and outside of institutions, educating, publishing and curating.
Come and ask questions - there will be no wrong answers. Come and share your thoughts, share food, and hold space this event is not to be missed!!!
@tontita00


71
2
1 years ago

Negroni Sbagliato Talks - We invite you to join PATCH and our panel guest to delve into how people are doing spatial criticism differently.

Introducing the speakers:

Renowned journalist Jonathan Nunn is a food and city writer based in London who co-edits the magazine Vittles and writes for publications such as Eater London, The Guardian and Prospect Magazine.

His practice aims to diversify food writing and the industry itself. As the author of ‘London Feeds Itself’ his reference to the experiencing cities through food is distinctly spatial, delving into the local geographies and community structures as much as the food itself.


25
1
1 years ago

Link for tickets in bio ✨
Swipe to meet our amazing panelists!
Join us @alexander_hills_architects !

In a world where anyone with ideas and internet access can be a critic, does the role of the sole Architectural Critic still hold relevance today? How has the precarity of architectural writing in recent years affected the role of the critic? And is the world of Architectural criticism opening up, or is this just reflective of the declining critic roles available?


36
1 years ago

Link for tickets in bio ✨
Swipe to meet our amazing panelists!
Join us @alexander_hills_architects !

In a world where anyone with ideas and internet access can be a critic, does the role of the sole Architectural Critic still hold relevance today? How has the precarity of architectural writing in recent years affected the role of the critic? And is the world of Architectural criticism opening up, or is this just reflective of the declining critic roles available?


36
1 years ago

Link for tickets in bio ✨
Swipe to meet our amazing panelists!

In a world where anyone with ideas and internet access can be a critic, does the role of the sole Architectural Critic still hold relevance today? How has the precarity of architectural writing in recent years affected the role of the critic? And is the world of Architectural criticism opening up, or is this just reflective of the declining critic roles available?

Join PATCH Collective in conversation with a panel of young practitioners, writers, editors and publicists whose work explores some of these questions. ❤️


89
4
1 years ago

Link for tickets in bio ✨
Swipe to meet our amazing panelists!

In a world where anyone with ideas and internet access can be a critic, does the role of the sole Architectural Critic still hold relevance today? How has the precarity of architectural writing in recent years affected the role of the critic? And is the world of Architectural criticism opening up, or is this just reflective of the declining critic roles available?

Join PATCH Collective in conversation with a panel of young practitioners, writers, editors and publicists whose work explores some of these questions. ❤️


89
4
1 years ago


Join us for a celebratory evening of delicious snacks as we celebrate the launch of our collection and printed publication for Open House Festival "Holding Space" 💫

Shifting the focus from London’s cultural centres, our collection explores the polycentric nature of London to celebrate the diverse network of communities that gives the city its quality. We’re spotlighting buildings, places and eateries that uplift and serve communities around London's periphery.

15.09.23
Host of Leyton , 658 High Road. Leyton, London E10 6JP
link in bio to tickets on Open House Festival website 🔗

With love,
Nyima + Betty

@opencity_uk @hostofleyton


3
4
2 years ago

Join us for a celebratory evening of delicious snacks as we celebrate the launch of our collection and printed publication for Open House Festival "Holding Space" 💫

Shifting the focus from London’s cultural centres, our collection explores the polycentric nature of London to celebrate the diverse network of communities that gives the city its quality. We’re spotlighting buildings, places and eateries that uplift and serve communities around London's periphery.

15.09.23
Host of Leyton , 658 High Road. Leyton, London E10 6JP
link in bio to tickets on Open House Festival website 🔗

With love,
Nyima + Betty

@opencity_uk @hostofleyton


3
4
2 years ago

Join us for a celebratory evening of delicious snacks as we celebrate the launch of our collection and printed publication for Open House Festival "Holding Space" 💫

Shifting the focus from London’s cultural centres, our collection explores the polycentric nature of London to celebrate the diverse network of communities that gives the city its quality. We’re spotlighting buildings, places and eateries that uplift and serve communities around London's periphery.

15.09.23
Host of Leyton , 658 High Road. Leyton, London E10 6JP
link in bio to tickets on Open House Festival website 🔗

With love,
Nyima + Betty

@opencity_uk @hostofleyton


3
4
2 years ago

Join us for a celebratory evening of delicious snacks as we celebrate the launch of our collection and printed publication for Open House Festival "Holding Space" 💫

Shifting the focus from London’s cultural centres, our collection explores the polycentric nature of London to celebrate the diverse network of communities that gives the city its quality. We’re spotlighting buildings, places and eateries that uplift and serve communities around London's periphery.

15.09.23
Host of Leyton , 658 High Road. Leyton, London E10 6JP
link in bio to tickets on Open House Festival website 🔗

With love,
Nyima + Betty

@opencity_uk @hostofleyton


3
4
2 years ago


Instagram Stories geheim ansehen

Der Instagram Story Viewer ist ein einfaches Tool, mit dem Sie Instagram Stories, Videos, Fotos oder IGTV heimlich ansehen und speichern können. Mit diesem Service können Sie Inhalte herunterladen und offline genießen, wann immer Sie möchten. Wenn Sie etwas Interessantes auf Instagram finden, das Sie später überprüfen möchten, oder Stories anonym ansehen möchten, ist unser Viewer ideal für Sie. Anonstories bietet eine ausgezeichnete Lösung, um Ihre Identität zu schützen. Instagram hat die Stories-Funktion erstmals im August 2023 eingeführt, die schnell auch von anderen Plattformen übernommen wurde, dank ihres fesselnden, zeitlich begrenzten Formats. Stories ermöglichen es Nutzern, schnelle Updates zu teilen, sei es Fotos, Videos oder Selfies, ergänzt durch Text, Emojis oder Filter, und sind nur 24 Stunden lang sichtbar. Dieser begrenzte Zeitrahmen sorgt für eine hohe Interaktion im Vergleich zu regulären Posts. Heutzutage sind Stories eine der beliebtesten Methoden, um sich in sozialen Medien zu verbinden und zu kommunizieren. Wenn Sie jedoch eine Story ansehen, kann der Ersteller Ihren Namen in seiner Viewer-Liste sehen, was ein Problem für die Privatsphäre sein kann. Was ist, wenn Sie Stories durchsuchen möchten, ohne bemerkt zu werden? Hier wird Anonstories nützlich. Es ermöglicht Ihnen, öffentliche Instagram-Inhalte anzusehen, ohne Ihre Identität preiszugeben. Geben Sie einfach den Benutzernamen des Profils ein, das Sie interessiert, und das Tool zeigt dessen neueste Stories an. Funktionen des Anonstories Viewers: - Anonymes Browsen: Sehen Sie Stories, ohne in der Viewer-Liste zu erscheinen. - Kein Konto erforderlich: Sehen Sie öffentliche Inhalte, ohne ein Instagram-Konto zu erstellen. - Inhalte herunterladen: Speichern Sie beliebige Story-Inhalte direkt auf Ihrem Gerät für die Offline-Nutzung. - Highlights anzeigen: Greifen Sie auf Instagram-Highlights zu, auch über das 24-Stunden-Fenster hinaus. - Repost-Überwachung: Verfolgen Sie Reposts oder Interaktionen bei Stories für persönliche Profile. Einschränkungen: - Dieses Tool funktioniert nur mit öffentlichen Accounts; private Accounts bleiben unzugänglich. Vorteile: - Datenschutzfreundlich: Sehen Sie sich beliebige Instagram-Inhalte an, ohne bemerkt zu werden. - Einfach und unkompliziert: Keine App-Installation oder Registrierung erforderlich. - Exklusive Tools: Laden Sie Inhalte herunter und verwalten Sie sie auf eine Weise, die Instagram nicht bietet.

Vorteile von Anonstories

IG Stories privat entdecken

Behalten Sie Instagram-Updates diskret im Blick, schützen Sie Ihre Privatsphäre und bleiben Sie anonym.


Privater Instagram Viewer

Sehen Sie Profile und Fotos anonym an, ganz einfach mit dem Private Profile Viewer.


Kostenloser Story Viewer

Dieses kostenlose Tool ermöglicht es Ihnen, Instagram Stories anonym anzusehen und dabei Ihre Aktivität vor dem Story-Ersteller zu verbergen.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

 
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Anonstories ermöglicht es Nutzern, Instagram-Stories anzusehen, ohne den Ersteller zu benachrichtigen.

 
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Funktioniert nahtlos auf iOS, Android, Windows, macOS und modernen Browsern wie Chrome und Safari.

 
Sicherheit und Datenschutz

Priorisiert sicheres, anonymes Browsen, ohne Login-Daten zu benötigen.

 
Keine Registrierung

Nutzer können öffentliche Stories ansehen, indem sie einfach einen Benutzernamen eingeben – kein Konto erforderlich.

 
Unterstützte Formate

Lädt Fotos (JPEG) und Videos (MP4) mühelos herunter.

 
Kosten

Der Dienst ist kostenlos nutzbar.

 
Private Accounts

Inhalte von privaten Accounts sind nur für Follower zugänglich.

 
Dateiverwendung

Dateien sind nur für persönliche oder Bildungszwecke und müssen Urheberrechtsregeln entsprechen.

 
Wie es funktioniert

Geben Sie einen öffentlichen Benutzernamen ein, um Stories anzusehen oder herunterzuladen. Der Dienst generiert direkte Links, um Inhalte lokal zu speichern.