A vacant site in Sydenham next to Gap Filler Headquarters. This was later turned into a garden by Greening the Rubble.
Volunteers nailing planks to the outer walls of the 10 square metre office building, soon to be Gap Filler Headquarters.
Volunteers hammer boards to the outside of the 10 square metre office building, soon to be Gap Filler Headquarters in Sydenham.
Volunteers adding black thermal paper to the floor of the 10 square metre office building, soon to be Gap Filler Headquarters.
The inside of the Gap Filler Headquarters. Members of the Gap Filler team are working on a table in the centre of the office.
The almost finished mural on the side of a building in Sydenham. Pallets with painting equipment and a stool can be seen in front.
Members of Gap Filler and volunteers posing for a photograph in front of the half complete 10m2 office building in Sydenham.
Members of the public enjoying Coffee Zone, a cafe in a shack next to the 10 square metre office building in Sydenham.
The ceiling of the 10 square metre office building, soon to be Gap Filler Headquarters. Metal bracing can be seen between the wooden beams.
The construction of the 10 square metre office building which is to serve as Gap Filler Headquarters. Two men add insulation to the back wall.
The construction of the 10 square metre office building which is to serve as Gap Filler Headquarters. Two men put the walls together.
The site in Sydenham where the 10 square metre office building of Gap Filler Headquarters sits, with the Coffee Zone shack next door.
Volunteers drill holes in corrugated iron on the outside of the 10 square metre office building, soon to be Gap Filler Headquarters.
Workers nail recycled metal sheets to the outside of the 10m2 office building, soon to be Gap Filler's Headquarters.
The construction of the 10 square metre office building which is to serve as Gap Filler Headquarters. A volunteer putting the roof together.
The construction of the 10 square metre office building which is to serve as Gap Filler Headquarters. Three volunteers putting the roof together.
The construction of the 10 square metre office building which is to serve as Gap Filler Headquarters. Two men nail the walls together.
Workers nail recycled metal sheets to the outside of the 10m2 office building, soon to be Gap Filler's Headquarters.
The construction of the 10 square metre office building which is to serve as Gap Filler Headquarters. A volunteer measures a spot on the roof for the solar panels.
An artwork in the walls of the Gap Filler Headquarters office building in Sydenham. The wall is made out of perspex which reveals recycled materials underneath.
An artwork in the walls of the Gap Filler Headquarters office building in Sydenham. The wall is made out of perspex which reveals recycled materials underneath.
The finished mural on the side of a building in Sydenham. The mural reads, "The things which I have seen I now can see no more - William".
The construction of the 10 square metre office building which is to serve as Gap Filler Headquarters. A volunteer drills a hole in the roof for the solar panels.
The 10 square metre office building on a vacant site in Sydenham, serving as the Gap Filler Headquarters. In front of the building is a garden created by wheelbarrow 'pot plants'.
Workers building the 10m2 office building, soon to be the Gap Filler Headquarters in Sydenham. A sign out front reads, "Gap Filler project in progress on this site".
A snow woman outside Gap Filler Headquarters, the 10 square metre office building in Sydenham. In the background a mural can be seen, reading, "The things which I have seen I now can see no more".
A snow woman outside Gap Filler Headquarters, the 10 square metre office building in Sydenham. In the background a mural can be seen, reading, "The things which I have seen I now can see no more".
The structure of the 10 square metre office building which is to serve as Gap Filler Headquarters is almost complete. A sign on the front reads, "Gap Filler project in progress on this site".
The perspex wall of the 10 square metre office building viewed from the inside. Volunteers have begun to fill the wall with recycled materials which will be sealed inside with another sheet of perspex.
The inside of the Gap Filler Headquarters, with an artwork made out of recycled materials on the wall in the background. Members of the Gap Filler team are working on a table in the centre of the office.