The focus of my Major Design Project lies in understanding contradictions and complexities in systems of border control to produce new, subversive readings and configurations of border forms. For systems of power and control to be deployed, they rely on institutional frameworks and protocols of standardisation which are projected onto ungoverned or otherwise-governed elements. Control cannot exist without the definition and quantification of what it seeks to regulate. Border architectures are shaped by these systems, regulations and analyses. There are disputes in how the Moroccan government and the Algerian Polisario Front demarcate the border between Morocco and Algeria. These disputes result in contested 'slivers' which are claimed by both sides. This project is situated in and amongst these 'sliver zones', through which I explore the concept of the border as 'an in-between space'. Not least to note, the Algeria-Morocco border has been in a state of closure since 1994 due to the politics between the nations, with no land-crossing legitimised between the nations, and the borderlands heavily surveyed by law and order officials. This costs the Algerian and Moroccan economies in excess of