New Textile Reuse Hub to launch this summer
Hackney Wick and Fish Island Community Development Trust (HWFI CDT) is excited to announce that, as part of the ReRoute project, it has secured a space with The Trampery Fish Island Village, to launch a textile reuse hub that will focus on solutions to reduce textile waste and be the home of the Sustainable Young Makers programme.
The Textile Reuse Hub will showcase circular economy approaches to fashion and making and is the first ReRoute project to launch.
ReRoute is coordinated by HWFI CDT and is a programme to test, trial, scale and grow ideas and business initiatives that seek to reduce the amount of waste and emissions in the local area. ReRoute is a project designed by local people and businesses aimed at tackling climate change by coordinating local action and working together.
The Sustainable Young Makers Programme will run out of the Textile Reuse Hub and support young people from the local area to establish their own creative businesses using sustainable approaches. Young creatives will learn key business and sustainability skills working with Yodomo's professional maker community. They will have the opportunity to work in the space, and use the space as a platform to launch and sell products.
The Hub will also host community workshops focused on the reuse of textile waste, encouraging all of us to build more sustainability into our lives and learn about the reuse of textiles, materials and ways to avoid unnecessary textile waste.
The Textile Reuse Hub will be managed by social venture partners Yodomo, with programme support from Poplar HARCA, Rise Up East and local youth charities with space provided by the Trampery. .
The space will:
Provide a demonstrator for circular economy approaches to making, encouraging materials reuse and a space to use machinery and learn about materials to support sustainable making
Support young makers to gain experience in building their own fashion and making businesses, using circular approaches, or to adapt existing businesses to build in more sustainable approaches
Provide showcasing opportunities, including product launches, for Sustainable Young Makers
Engage the wider community in sustainable approaches to making through a series of events and activities
Encourage circular approaches in the wider Hackney Wick and Fish Island fashion, creative and making communities via access to material resources, linked to the Hackney Creative Reuse Project at Hackney City Farm
The Textile Reuse Hub has been made possible by the Greater London Authority’s (GLA) High Streets For All Challenge Fund and support from the London Borough of Hackney. In 2021, the GLA funded the HWFI CDT to deliver a circular economy initiative in the area, to demonstrate new ways of using the high street area and engaging young people in this agenda.
Jules Pipe, Deputy Mayor for Planning, Regeneration and Skills said:
“The Textile Reuse Hub is an exciting and innovative project that demonstrates how we can promote the circular economy through events to benefit local people, whilst revitalising our high streets and town centres. Building on the well-established local maker community, the Hub will support young entrepreneurs to develop their businesses in a more sustainable way, exploring the reuse of materials and reducing textile waste.
“This is just one of the great initiatives we’re supporting through the High Streets for All Challenge to build a better, greener and more prosperous London for everyone.”
Councillor Abdul Wahid, Cabinet Member for Jobs, Skills and Growth at Tower Hamlets Council said:
“We’re delighted that the HWFI CDT now has a home at The Trampery in Fish Island. Delivering education and guidance for young people with a passion for circular fashion is much needed in the borough as our focus on sustainability and empowering young talent continues to grow. I’m proud that we have been able to support the HWFI CDT and Yodomo through HWFI CEZ funding and support over the years and can’t wait to see what they will achieve in partnership with our residents.”
Alex Russell, Executive Director, Hackney Wick and Fish Island Community Development Trust said:
“Accessing a studio at The Trampery Fish Island Village is a great opportunity for us to showcase what we can do with our community when space is made available. We want to thank the Trampery for its support for the project and the GLA for the funding to enable us to do this. We see lots of ways we can work with users of the Trampery Fish Island members spaces to deliver sustainable fashion initiatives and engage more people in this agenda”.
Sophie Rochester, Founder and CEO, Yodomo said:
“We are delighted to be partnering with the HWFI CDT, The Trampery, Rise Up East and Poplar HARCA on this important initiative. The Textile Reuse Hub will support the next generation of creative trailblazers to thrive, building businesses based on sustainable principles that benefit both people and planet. It will enable young people from the local area to rightly take their place amongst the fantastic businesses coming to Fish Island Village. It’s the first demonstrator site establishing Hackney Wick and Fish Island as a home for the circular economy and will play a vital role in engaging communities in sustainability”.
Aku Adjei, Operational Lead, Rise Up East (My Ends Hackney) said:
“Rise Up East partners are thrilled to be part of this project, which will bridge the gap between young people in the community and new businesses and developments, by creating partnerships with companies locally to further the circular economy. Rise Up East are keen to work with other project partners and to see the space used to activate careers and support positive relationships between young people and the creative industries in Hackney Wick and Fish Island”.
Aaron O’Dowling-Keane, Head of Marketing, The Trampery said:
“We are delighted to give a home to The Textile Reuse Hub at The Trampery Fish Island Village, our newest campus for fashion, innovation, and sustainability in Hackney Wick.
Being able to connect young people interested in the circular economy with our amazing community of sustainable fashion entrepreneurs, furthers our mission to promote impactful business models and to contribute to the growth of neighbourhoods and communities.
We're looking forward to working alongside Hackney Wick and Fish Island Community Development Trust, Yodomo, Poplar HARCA, Rise Up East and more to bring the project to life.”
Notes to editors
About Hackney Wick and Fish Island Community Development Trust (HWFI CDT)
The Hackney Wick & Fish Island Community Development Trust (HWFI CDT) aims to preserve the rich cultural life of Hackney Wick and Fish Island by securing buildings for it to flourish in the long term.
We are committed to working together with the community, landlords, public authorities and developers to ensure that the identity and social fabric of the Hackney Wick and Fish Island community is retained, enterprise is supported and change benefits local people.
Between us we support a critical local eco-system of cultural and community activities that provide enterprise, jobs and skills opportunities for local enterprise and residents.
The HWFI CDT is currently engaged in realising a circular economy hub in Hackney Wick and Fish Island following consensus amongst businesses and the community to focus on the environment and impact of climate change.
Bolstered by the support of local partners, the GLA, LLDC, London Borough of Hackney, London Borough of Tower Hamlets and UCL, we are delivering a series of ambitious projects centred around our aims of reducing emissions from waste, promoting reusing and recycling, and encouraging more participation from the local community in a circular economy.
About Yodomo
Yodomo is a social venture on a mission to increase wellbeing and promote the understanding of reuse of materials by facilitating wider participation in making and crafts. It finds creative ways to turn trash into treasure, and believes that making is good for people and good for the planet. Yodomo collects textile waste from businesses and makes it available to creative people to transform it into something new. It encourages participation in crafts and making by bringing the expertise of independent artists and makers directly to individuals. Yodomo focuses on:
Helping build sustainable businesses - helping businesses find sustainable ways to tackle their textile waste and educate them about circular processes.
Sourcing materials for makers - providing the maker community with materials for creative projects, carefully sourcing and distributing through circular hubs and its growing maker network
Helping others learn to make - engaging the public in developing skills and learning about reusing materials, teaching new skills through video guides, written instructions or in-person workshops.
To date, Yodomo support a network of 1400 ‘creative reuse members’, have supported over 50 businesses through reallocating their textile ‘waste’ and have diverted 4.2 tonnes of textile waste from landfill.
About the Trampery
The Trampery is a purpose-led enterprise dedicated to making business a positive force in society. We provide workspaces, venues, training and management services in pursuit of our mission.
The five key elements of our mission are to:
Advance business models with positive social & environmental impact.
Support entrepreneurs from under-represented backgrounds.
Drive inclusion & diversity in the workplace.
Promote healthy work-life balance & wellbeing.
Contribute to thriving neighbourhoods and strong communities.
The Trampery Fish Island Village is a 6-acre campus of studios, facilities and social spaces spread over 10 buildings alongside the canal in the heart of Hackney Wick. Its purpose is to bring together London’s most talented fashion designers and entrepreneurs and to provide everything they need to help them grow.
About Rise Up East
Rise Up East is a consortium of youth organisations that have come together to provide positive opportunities and interventions for our young people in the community. Our consortium is part of a Pan London programme called My Ends which is funding communities to work in a hyperlocal way to overcome and reduce violence.