In Belfast, where geography is political and choosing which street to walk down can be an act of positioning, Array Collective makes work that's deliberately loud and visible. Jane Butler and Thomas Wells discuss creating safe space through presence rather than walls, making work for communities they're part of rather than parachuting in with solutions, and how humour and silliness can disarm audiences enough to start conversations about abortion rights and marriage equality. This is about what happens when visibility itself becomes the architecture.
Links:
Array Collective: www.arraystudiosbelfast.com
When community groups take on derelict buildings, they become project managers, fundraisers, negotiators, and somehow - often without training - responsible for capital programmes worth hundreds of thousands of pounds. Margaret Gibb from Kinning Park Complex in Glasgow, and Samuel Sparrow and David Smith from Old School Thornhill in Dumfries and Galloway share the reality of leading community-led development projects. From discovering that all support is front-loaded to wrestling with whether spaces can be "too nice" for communities, this conversation reveals what happens after you get the keys. Spoiler: opening the building is just the beginning.
Links:
Old School Thornhill: www.oldschoolthornhill.com
New Practice: www.new-practice.co.uk
When Studio Polpo set up as a social enterprise in the early 2010s, they had to explain to the RIBA what that even meant. Now they're initiating Community Land Trust projects and understanding development finance better than most developers. Cristina Cerulli discusses what it means to run an architecture practice legally required to benefit society rather than shareholders, why doing non-commercial work means being even more aware of money, and how playfulness creates sideways engagement in serious conversations about housing and community.
Links:
Sheffield CLT: www.sheffieldclt.uk
What happens when the people who'll actually live in homes get to design them from scratch? Mellis Haward from Archio Architects shares how winning projects through public votes, running four-day design workshops with just a site plan, and genuinely listening to what people aren't saying can fundamentally change how we approach housing design. From Community Land Trust projects in Lewisham to co-housing schemes in Norwich, this conversation explores the "happy naivety" required to let communities truly lead.
Links:
Archio Architects: www.archio.co.uk
London Community Land Trust: www.londonclt.org
A Building for Your Community explores how communities shape the spaces they inhabit. Hosted by architect and creative director Becca Thomas, this series examines community-led development from multiple perspectives - from architects pioneering participatory design, to social enterprises restructuring how practice works, to artists creating visibility for underrepresented groups, to community groups who became accidental property developers. Each episode asks: how do we build spaces that truly serve the people who use them?
Produced by Becca Thomas and Halina Rifai, with editing by Halina Rifai and research support by Mathilde Piel.
Find more at abuildingforyourcommunity.co.uk