In this issue are various topics surrounding the theme of Working Queer. Over the last 20 years, queerness has become tricky to spot. Its widespread appropriation by mainstream culture has made things that were queer probably no longer queer, and things that perhaps are queer have now taken on new forms. In short, queerness constantly adapts. Is this the end of queer space? ask Jaffer Kolb and Aaron Betsky. In addition, Nicolas Gamso investigates fascist intrigue and the homo-spatial imaginary, Michael Wang writes about queering the system, Andrew Holder offers five points toward a queer architecture, Andrés Jaque looks at Grindr Archiurbanism, and more.