Spatial Narratives of Commoning: Beyond Geographies is a research project that will be facilitated by a duo who is part of a wider artist-run project space and association; each of who work respectively across spatial and artistic practice, research and pedagogy, commons and commoning. It is envisaged as a collaborative research environment and public program dedicated to exploring commoning practices through the lens of architecture and spatial practice beyond disciplinary, geographic, and institutional boundaries. How can we find zones of encounter, situated choreographies of commoning, across times and territories? The series of public talks and encounters will bring together a diverse group of practitioners—architects, researchers, activists, and artists—who work at the intersections of commoning, community-based design, cultural heritage, and socio-ecological transformation. Through the sharing of research, practice, and stories, the formats developed through the series aim to uncover and speculate upon alternative architectural narratives that emerge from contested territories, peripheral geographies, and informal or collective spatial strategies. A red thread of questioning will ask: How can architectural and spatial practices respond to displacement, ecological crisis, and social marginalization and prefigure modes of dwelling in common across difference? What kinds of built environments and spatial imaginaries emerge from solidarity, memory, and repair? The series, hosted at the artist-run project space of which we are members, will not just include public talks, but also screenings, workshops, roundtable discussions, and alternative happenings — crucially, an ethos of commoning will be embedded throughout the collective learning process, situated in place and the body, in attunement with non-human and non-industrial rhythms, we will invite the public collectivity to become co-researchers and co-protagonists of the documentary and forthcoming spatial narratives of commoning. We envisage that the program will engage with themes such as spatial practices of commoning, feminist urbanism, decolonial pedagogies, traditional construction techniques, the preservation of cultural heritage, and participatory restoration — alongside what evolves organically over the course of the year, shaped by the urgencies and contributions of its participants. Contributors from various regions—including Turkey, Italy, Lebanon, Greece, New Zealand, and Germany—will bring lived experience and critical insights from their local contexts into shared dialogue. The series will culminate in a final public assembly and small exhibition at the artist-run project space of which we are part of inputs collated throughout the process.