Innovation Archives - The Wick https://thisisthewick.com/category/innovation/ A new media title dedicated to the creative spirit of Hackney Wick and surrounding neighbourhoods Fri, 14 Jun 2024 15:19:09 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://thisisthewick.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/cropped-The-Wick-stacked-32x32.jpg Innovation Archives - The Wick https://thisisthewick.com/category/innovation/ 32 32 Connection, Communication & Community Ownership https://thisisthewick.com/innovation/connection-communication-community-ownership/ Fri, 14 Jun 2024 15:17:43 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=2176 Creative Wick founder, William Chamberlain, on the steady growth of the Hackney Wick model of 'inside out' regeneration

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Connection, Communication & Community Ownership

GUEST EDITOR, Spring 2024: William Chamberlain is a solicitor, senior partner at Counterculture LLP and serial social entrepreneur who, since 2008, has co-founded Hackney Wicked CIC, founded Creative Wick and co-founded the HWFI Community Development Trust. He is a PhD researcher at Loughborough University London working on sustainable models of creative led regeneration.

I moved to Hackney Wick in 2008 to see how the Olympic legacy was being delivered. I was a sponsorship lawyer and had been part of the London 2012 bid team which made the promise that “the communities surrounding the Olympic Park would benefit from the Games”.

I’m not sure many of us on the bid appreciated just how many artists were living and working in Hackney Wick and Fish Island at the time, but a 2009 land use survey put the number of creative workspaces and studios at more than 600, making it one of the most densely populated artist communities in the world. And we all know what usually happens to artist communities when the developers arrive…

Inspired by the Hackney Wicked Art Festival, which launched that first summer as an artist-led grassroots celebration of “art for art’s sake”, I started a local creative business network – the Cultural Interest Group (CIG) – in 2010, which still meets monthly. The CIG represents all sectors of the local business community: entrepreneurs, SMEs, academics, elected councillors and local authority officers, the third sector, developers, cultural institutions, affordable creative workspace providers, funders, corporations, artists and residents. 

Its aim is to facilitate as many personal cross-sector relationships as possible through collaboration and the sharing of resources, experience, knowledge and opportunities. Membership is free, inclusive and open to anyone and the mix of attendees provides an innovation network with opportunities to collaborate with a range of different stakeholders.

It’s the members that turn up to meetings each month that make things happen, and we talk about ‘engineered serendipity’ – we never know who exactly is going to be there on the day. It was at one of these CIG meetings that a member asked the LLDC for Creative Enterprise Zone protection back in September 2013 – the GLA announced the initiative in 2017. 

It was members that lobbied over many years for the permanent protection of affordable creative workspace through changes to local authority and planning policy, and we now have Trowbridge Gardens and The Bath House being operated by local providers.

Meanwhile, Bow Arts Trust will soon open thousands of square feet of new, permanently affordable creative workspace in the Hackney Yards development surrounding the station. CIG members also started the first issue of The Wick newspaper in 2011 and the network is still where we source most of our stories today. 

CIG members initiated the Save Hackney Wick campaign against the part-demolition of Vittoria Wharf in 2016, that Outset Studiomakers supported. This then encouraged the London Creative Land Trust to make its first acquisition at Stone Studios, now operated by Mainyard Studios and Cell Projects, the original pre-development studio provider on the site. 

And it was four not-for-profit member organisations talking about setting up a community trust at a CIG in 2011 who eventually founded our local Community Development Trust in 2017. The CDT now has two meanwhile use sites (with Yodomo’s Textile Reuse Hub and The Loop circular economy hub on Wallis Road), and is in negotiations with developers on a number of long-term sites in the area.

I’m reassured by the role being played, and the social impact generated by, the many third sector organisations based here – good people doing good things in a good way – and there seems to be a knock-on effect that’s influencing some of the more commercial operators to behave in a more considerate, supportive and sustainable way.

In a place changing as quickly as ours, there are always tensions and bumps in the road. Mutually beneficial cross-sector relationships take time to build. Respect and trust has to be earned over a long period of time, but I think a replicable and transferrable model for permanent, sustainable creative placemaking is emerging here.

The idea is to encourage ‘inside-out’ regeneration ie. working with existing community assets. By working with the people that hold the soul of the place dear to their hearts, and ensuring that they have the chance to be part of its future, I hope that we can partially prevent the large-scale gentrification that often comes with development projects on this scale and retain the guardians of the heritage, history and –particularly here – the rebellious spirit of the place.

Despite the current global situation, cost of living crisis, rising rents and increasing levels of disadvantage, I’m hopeful about the future. We have the opportunity to prove that creativity really does make places better, and that a mutually supportive hyper-local business network can deliver opportunities for everyone, in a genuinely mixed use local economy, with an affordable price-point for all. 

Art, culture and the creative industries bring people together, facilitate positive relationships, increase levels of resilience, cohesion and wellbeing, encourage openness and innovation and collaboration rather than competition. 

In my opinion this model has the potential to tick all the Big Society, Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental, Social and Governance boxes.

Creative Wick and The Loco, our partner on this paper, have recently been awarded a Westfield Creative Futures grant by the Foundation for Future London to develop the last piece of this social infrastructure model: a digital creative placemaking platform to complement the live monthly meetings, weekly email newsletter and monthly Wick Wednesdays. 

In the coming months we’ll be working with a range of local stakeholders representing young people, the voluntary sector and our world-class neighbours at Here East, East Bank, Stratford Cross and the wider Olympic Park area to co-design a platform that encourages circular economy principles and the use of local supply chains.

I hope that Hackney Wick’s three pillar model of Connection through a locally trusted network, Communication via a digital and print media platform and Community Ownership of land use, equitable access to space and affordable rents through a locally-operated trust has the potential to help deliver an innovative solution towards solving some of the problems facing world cities today.

This editor’s letter first appeared in the Spring 2024 edition of The Wick print edition. 

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AJ from Park Pets on being an 18-yeard-old shop owner https://thisisthewick.com/innovation/aj-hinton-park-pets-interview/ Thu, 05 Oct 2023 08:32:38 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=2018 Meet the teen entrepreneur who turned his lockdown dog-walking venture into a fully-fledged retail business

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AJ from Park Pets on being an 18-yeard-old shop owner

Meet the teen entrepreneur who turned his lockdown dog-walking venture into a fully-fledged retail business

How did you end up becoming an 18-year-old shop owner?

When I was 15 I started offering dog walking and dog sitting services to all my neighbours in East Village. It was originally kind of just for fun, plus I needed to make some money, but it turned out to be a really good venture to do during Covid as so many people had got pets over that time. That’s how it all started. Then I was at Hackney Bridge one day and saw a sign on the door here advertising ‘free space for young creatives’. I applied for it, not thinking I get it. The process was really long involving making a video, but I just told my story and explained how I wanted to upgrade the business from walking and sitting dogs to selling pet supplies and ended up winning the space rent-free for a year. I then invested my dog walking savings to get it all set up.

 

Tell us about the concept behind the shop?

My intention from the start was for it to be an environmentally friendly, zero waste business, and for it to feel a bit like a pick and mix for dogs. We’re actually using human sweet dispensers, but instead they are filled with dog treats, and people can come and refill containers for their pets without the packaging. Also, in comparison to grocery stores and supermarket treats, which are full of preservatives and additives, ours are extremely raw and natural. They are much more healthy for dogs, and are made from the scraps from human food production; things like pigs ears and chicken feet, that would otherwise just be disposed of.

 

How did you find all your suppliers?

I did like a lot of like primary research, sending questionnaires to local pet owners asking what they like and what they want their pets to have. Then it took a few months to find the best ethical wholesale suppliers, because I didn’t want to source from people who are solely making treats for dogs. I wanted to divert the scraps from butchers and mass food production, which are so good and healthy for dogs. For example, we sell hairy rabbit ears, which some people are really freaked out about – even I was freaked out about it in the beginning – but they have so many health benefits for dogs, including being a natural dewormer and flea treatment.

 

What have the first couple of months as a shop owner been like?

Everybody keeps telling me how pleased they are that we’ve opened as there’s no local pet shops around here, its all cafes. I saw that when I was applying for the space and knew there was definitely a market for all these new pet owners. A lot of people my age say they want to open their own business, but I never really had that mindset. It’s just been a journey from walking other people’s dogs as a side hustle to suddenly owning a shop.

 

Where do you think it’s all going to lead next?

I feel I’m quite a spontaneous person, so I’m just seeing where it takes me. I still aim to go to university, but this year I’ve delayed that to focus 100% on the business. I haven’t hired any staff yet – my mum and my friends have been super supportive helping me voluntarily – but all the money has been invested back into building the business. I’m slowly expanding the products that we’re selling, like now we’re selling like pet bandanas which are handmade, and we’ve got cat toys. I want to appeal to a wide range of customers, because I was really surprised how many people want to have a vegan lifestyle for their pets, so we’ve expanded the rage to appeal to them too.

 

What do you friends think about your career?

A lot of them say they want to start their own ventures, but none of them have done something like this yet, really. And it’s super hard. There have been times when I ask myself why I’m doing all this, and that maybe a 9 to 5 would be easier. It never stops – even when I’m sleeping my mind is thinking about what I can do next to help the business grow. I still want to be out with friends partying and everything too, but they all say to me that I’m only going to be an 18-year-old business owner once, so I should try and make the most of that and enjoy all the opportunities that come from it.

Visit Park Pets at Unit E, G05 Hackney Bridge, E15 2SJ

Follow on Insta @parkpetsshop

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East London’s enterprise catalyst https://thisisthewick.com/innovation/east-londons-enterprise-catalyst/ Sun, 11 Jul 2021 11:12:42 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=495 Just off the River Lea Navigation at the former sweet factory site Clarnico Quay, stands the new Hackney Bridge; a cluster of businesses, restaurants, start-ups, and a new Sunday market (see p.4). Amongst all these commercial traders is the Good Growth Hub, a space to connect businesses with local talent and provide a range of […]

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East London’s enterprise catalyst

Just off the River Lea Navigation at the former sweet factory site Clarnico Quay, stands the new Hackney Bridge; a cluster of businesses, restaurants, start-ups, and a new Sunday market (see p.4). Amongst all these commercial traders is the Good Growth Hub, a space to connect businesses with local talent and provide a range of employment, skills and enterprise activities. The name comes from urban geography theories around creating communities and improving these connections.

New Direction was named as the Hub’s operator earlier this year. The organisation grew from an Arts Council supported programme to deliver creative education in schools back in 2002 into a charity that began to focus on the full progression of local young people from education into employment. Oliver Benjamin, their Director of Employment and Skills tells us what the impact of being in a physical space will have on the organization. “Being the operator of the Good Growth Hub is an opportunity for us to crystallise the past decade of our experience of working in this space,” he says. “It will allow us to test ideas and think about what preemployability looks like. It’s also the opportunity to build a legacy.”

From their early roots in a room at the back of the Discover Children’s Story Centre on Stratford High Street, the charity witnessed creative and cultural heritage organisations moving into the area, but saw a disconnect with the people working in those institutions and the local demographic. To help bridge the gap and allow more locals to progress into the creative and cultural heritage sector, they developed employability programmes that provide training placements for individuals at organisations like the BBC, Sadler’s Wells and UCL Culture.

“A big part of what we’re trying to do is about creating an inclusive workforce,” says Oliver, “helping businesses be better at having fair practices, providing good work and paying London Living Wage.”

The Good Growth Hub website will launch soon and their external offer is expected to be available in early Summer. “We’re going to do a callout for local mentors,” says Oliver, “as we regularly work on briefs for businesses that might ask a group of young people to develop a podcast, for instance. Then we ask locals who have experiences in radio or audio editing to help teach on a course.”

“I was placed at Stratford Circus Arts Centre for six months, doing a full time creative learning and marketing internship there,” she tells us. A second placement was scheduled at another performing arts institution, but the pandemic meant the company could no longer host her. An alternative was arranged at the LLDC, which led to a full-time role as a Community Project Coordinator. “My CV is a lot stronger since the STEP programme and I feel more confident about my future opportunities in the arts. I really thought that I might have to look for another career instead, but after STEP, I feel confident I can remain in this [theatre] industry. “ When the Covid-19 pandemic hit last year, young workers were the hardest hit by job scarcity and unemployment, 80% of jobs lost in the past year were to those under the age of 35. “I do think this is the perfect time, as now more than ever the Good Growth Hub is needed,” says Tasnim. In her role with LLDC she has been able to witness the build-up to the Hub and directly work with other young people, (including myself ) to co-design a wellbeing focused programme. Much of the work planned for the Good Growth Hub will involve a co-design process, with stakeholders including young people, businesses and employers being consulted during the design process of new activities.

Another business who took part in the project was Zhero App, also based at Hackney Bridge. Joe Sharpe and Ollie King kicked off their startup 10 months ago with the ethos of building a logistics company that does not rely on outdated forms of employment and ethics. They use vehicles that are 100% electric and high-capacity e-cargo bicycles to ensure they can fulfil their client needs. They mostly work with independent businesses in the arts and cultural sector and are driven by the idea of local connectivity.

Joe explains that they raised capital for the business by applying for loans at the British Business Bank, “neither of us had written a business plan before, he says, “and neither of us had run a business before. So, we got some mentorship through their startup loans programme. It was useful in the early stages for knowing what our options were. Since then there have been a few East London based networks that have really helped us, too.”

Having recently employed their first young employee, they are now looking at another programme, the government’s Kickstarter scheme, to help more underemployed young people into employment.

“The dynamic for us as such a tiny company is making sure that when we take on more junior, less experienced staff, we are doing the right thing by them as well.”

Bringing together businesses like Zhero App and local talent like Tasnim is what is needed to make the Good Growth Hub a success. With the Hub due to open its doors this Summer, its potential to create a lasting impact is enormous. It has the capacity to create connections, improve employability and reveal accessible pathways that might otherwise seem hidden. A New Direction has a history of successfully generating opportunities for local young people and it’s clear the work they have planned for the Good Growth Hub points towards an even more exciting future as we emerge from the pandemic.

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Creative Wick publishes Living Lab report https://thisisthewick.com/innovation/creative-wick-publishes-living-lab-report/ Sat, 15 May 2021 17:31:51 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=402 Entitled 'We need each other more than ever', download the research document into the impact of Covid locally

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Creative Wick publishes Living Lab report

Local creative economy champions Creative Wick have produced some research findings in an assessment of the impact of Covid-19 on the sector in Hackney Wick & Fish Island, and the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.

The Living Lab report ‘We need each other more than ever’ can be downloaded in full here

It highlights the importance of having access to locally trusted networks for connections, support and information sharing.

Find out more about the Living Lab here

The Cultural Interest Group (CIG) meets monthly and has over 2000 local members. More information and to join the mailing list here

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The Story of ScrubHub https://thisisthewick.com/innovation/the-story-of-scrubhub/ Sun, 07 Feb 2021 15:18:43 +0000 http://thisisthewick.com/?p=248 The shock of Covid spurred some truly brilliant new collaborations in Hackney Wick, with an impact reaching far beyond, too

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The Story of ScrubHub

Camaraderie is one thing the coronavirus pandemic has strengthened instead of debilitated. Camaraderie not amongst friends and family alone, but also amongst complete strangers. Strangers and solidarity are often not words that complement each other, but the current worldwide crisis challenging all, in some way, shape or form, has made these two synonymous.

Lockdown resulted in many initiatives bringing together people who had never met before, through incredible work for their communities. Here in Hackney Wick, already well known as a hub of creative practitioners, a scrub sewing initiative called the ScrubHub was started. The idea then spread like wildfire across the country at the height of the pandemic.

The ScrubHub was a network of professional machinists, some working in fashion and costume design, that volunteered to sew scrubs for those working in the healthcare sector. In total 127 sewing hubs were started across England, Scotland and Wales. Co-founders Maya Ilany, Annabel Maguire, Rebecca Zehr and Brooke Dennis brought the hub to life following a request for help finding scrubs from Dr Katie Ward in the Hackney Wick Mutual Aid Group.

In the Hackney and Central London hub alone there were 120 volunteers who made 420 scrubs. Co founder Brooke Dennis directed the almighty production effort from her Hackney-based creative textiles studio, Make Town. “The work they did was spectacular,” she tells us. “They were just professionals that had lost their jobs.” One of the most rewarding things about starting the initiative, other than clothing healthcare professionals, was the sense of community Dennis felt it brought about. She describes talking to people about their personal stories and the positions they found themselves in as a result of the pandemic.

By providing an avenue to work, even if just on a voluntary basis, Dennis says she felt like she was giving people a sense of purpose. “One of the things lacking in the very first few weeks of  lockdown was human interaction. The fact that volunteers could get out of the house for a cause and actually do something that was positive and added value, was great. We supported our volunteers’ wellbeing by providing them with a sense of purpose.”

Founded on 23rd March,  the ScrubHub was open for just over two months, concluding nine weeks later, on 25th May. Despite the wonderful work the hubs did in such a short space of time, they faced a number of challenges. Being inundated with requests at times that led to unmanageable workloads, in some instances buyers were stockpiling rather than buying out of necessity and there was often difficulty in finding workspaces big enough to fit everyone. However, collaborating with other textile and fashion houses and studios in the Hackney area, that offered tables and floors, soon solved this.

New collaborations between local businesses is something Hackney Wick experienced at the height of the pandemic, and it continues today. In addition to the ScrubHub teaming up with local design studios, Hackney Wick Sewing collaborated with a number of businesses in the local area, and joined forces with the Caramel Rock fashion charity to produce facemasks.

Owner of Hackney Wick Sewing, Rachel Johnson, tells us “independent café Doh sold some of the masks we were making, with proceeds going back to the business. We also had repeat custom mask orders from dog food company Tails and we’re currently making sample masks for an event that art group Alice in Hackneyland are planning towards.”

Caramel Rock partnered with Johnson on its own facemask project, set up with the aim to produce 5,000 masks that will be made freely available to nonprofit organisations. “We aim to serve mainly non-profit charitable organisations with these masks,” says project co-ordinator Blessing Alade. “We have already been providing facemasks for food bank workers and sometimes for their customers as well.”

In talking to all these local businesses, one theme has emerged; the importance of collaboration during crisis. “I definitely think collaboration is really important now, looking at how severely the economy has been affected,” says Alade. “People being willing to do things – without wanting something in return – really helps the community building aspect of things.” Johnson very much echoes the same sentiment, calling collaboration “vital” and Dennis metaphorically spoke of community collaboration as a “continually expanding web.”

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