Women of the low-income group in urban areas of Bangladesh, living in densely populated areas, suffer to achieve
their demands for settlements, utility, and community service facilities. They are one of the most neglected genders to fulfill their
spatial needs. This paper aims to study the nature of domestic spaces and the women's compromise in using domestic spaces in
the study area of Pabna sweeper colony, a low-income housing by the Government in a small town of Bangladesh. In
Bangladesh, the Sweeper community is a secluded and ignored community, both socially and by the government as well. After
surveying 81 households and 100 women, it evaluates that this housing community's women suffer from inadequate working,
storing, and private spaces of unhygienic conditions that interrupt their reproductive, productive, and community engagement
role. They are also victims of gender discrimination, social inequalities, absence of economic identity, sexual harassment, etc. It
needs much attention to ensure standard