installations
We create interactive installations in public spaces to bring lived experiences of gendered violence into everyday environments. These installations allow passers-by to reflect, share, and imagine safer, more inclusive spaces for everyone. Using video, animation, creative captions, and community voices, our installations make invisible experiences visible, encouraging audiences to think differently about public space and share their own ideas.
get home
safe
Get Home Safe is an audiovisual installation that platforms women and girls’ hopes and dreams for safer public spaces. It invites passers-by to share their own experiences of travelling home, and reimagine the future of safety on public transport.
The installation was piloted at University of Birmingham Station during Welcome Week, funded by West Midlands Rail’s Customer and Communities Improvement Fund. It was built through focus group research with local young women & gender-marginalised people.
An anonymous feedback box and in-person conversations captured a wide range of responses to Get Home Safe. These included practical suggestions for making public transport safer - insights we were able to feed back to West Midlands Rail.
We received a variety of responses to our installation, with passers-by suggesting measures that could be put in place to make them feel safer in public space, such as:
production team
Director/Producers Daz Cox & Martha Harrison · Composer & Sound Designer Fraser Owen · Video Designer Amelia Hawkes.
credits
installations
We create interactive installations in public spaces to bring lived experiences of gendered violence into everyday environments. These installations allow passers-by to reflect, share, and imagine safer, more inclusive spaces for everyone. Using video, animation, creative captions, and community voices, our installations make invisible experiences visible, encouraging audiences to think differently about public space and share their own ideas.
get home safe
Get Home Safe is an audiovisual installation that platforms women and girls’ hopes and dreams for safer public spaces. It invites passers-by to share their own experiences of travelling home, and reimagine the future of safety on public transport.
The installation was piloted at University of Birmingham Station during Welcome Week. It was built through focus group research with local young women & gender-marginalised people.
An anonymous feedback box and in-person conversations captured a wide range of responses to Get Home Safe. These included practical suggestions for making public transport safer - insights we were able to feed back to West Midlands Rail.
We received a variety of responses to our installation, with passers-by suggesting measures that could be put in place to make them feel safer in public space, such as:
production team
Director/Producers Daz Cox & Martha Harrison · Composer & Sound Designer Fraser Owen · Video Designer Amelia Hawkes
credits
Funded by West Midlands Rail’s Customer and Communities Improvement Fund.
installations
We create interactive installations in public spaces to bring lived experiences of gendered violence into everyday environments. These installations allow passers-by to reflect, share, and imagine safer, more inclusive spaces for everyone. Using video, animation, creative captions, and community voices, our installations make invisible experiences visible, encouraging audiences to think differently about public space and share their own ideas.
get home safe
Get Home Safe is an audiovisual installation that platforms women and girls’ hopes and dreams for safer public spaces. It invites passers-by to share their own experiences of travelling home, and reimagine the future of safety on public transport.
The installation was piloted at University of Birmingham Station during Welcome Week. It was built through focus group research with local young women & gender-marginalised people.
An anonymous feedback box and in-person conversations captured a wide range of responses to Get Home Safe. These included practical suggestions for making public transport safer - insights we were able to feed back to West Midlands Rail.
We received a variety of responses to our installation, with passers-by suggesting measures that could be put in place to make them feel safer in public space, such as:
production team
Director/Producers Daz Cox & Martha Harrison · Composer & Sound Designer Fraser Owen · Video Designer Amelia Hawkes
credits
Funded by West Midlands Rail’s Customer and Communities Improvement Fund.