How the Black Females in Architecture Network is Changing Industry Standards

In early 2018, spatial practitioner and Bartlett lecturer Neba Sere hosted a panel discussion at London's Architecture Foundation, where she was one of six young trustees. The topic: beginnings. How to go about them, move ahead, and transform them into something that lasts. Six years later, she looks back on the event as a beginning in itself: that day marked the creation of a WhatsApp group that would turn into Black Females in Architecture (BFA). BFA is now a 500-strong global membership network co-directed by Sere and fellow architects Selasi Setufe and Akua Danso.

How the Black Females in Architecture Network is Changing Industry Standards
The short film 'A Voice for the 450 Plus', featuring interviews with the network's co-directors, was Black Females in Architecture's exclusive entry for the 2023 Venice Architecture Biennale. Image © Marco Zorzanello. 18th International Architecture Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, The laboratory of the Future The short film 'A Voice for the 450 Plus', featuring interviews with the network's co-directors, was Black Females in Architecture's exclusive entry for the 2023 Venice Architecture Biennale. Image © Marco Zorzanello. 18th International Architecture Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, The laboratory of the Future

In early 2018, spatial practitioner and Bartlett lecturer Neba Sere hosted a panel discussion at London's Architecture Foundation, where she was one of six young trustees. The topic: beginnings. How to go about them, move ahead, and transform them into something that lasts. Six years later, she looks back on the event as a beginning in itself: that day marked the creation of a WhatsApp group that would turn into Black Females in Architecture (BFA). BFA is now a 500-strong global membership network co-directed by Sere and fellow architects Selasi Setufe and Akua Danso.

BFA was initiated in response to the need for visibility of black women and female-identifying people with black heritage in architecture and the built environment. Last year, the group celebrated its fifth anniversary with the showing of a short film and a panel discussion at the Venice Architecture Biennale. Now, after putting in the groundwork of spreading information about the lack of diversity and equality in the industry and increasing their numbers, BFA is gearing up to drive physical change.

Read more »