High-dimensional degrees of photons – such as orbital angular momentum, spatial modes of frequency – provide a powerful mean to increase the density and security of quantum communication, and to enhance flexibility in quantum computing. In particular, the spatial degree of freedom is particularly suited to on-chip integration. Rapid progress has been made in recent years to develop integrated circuits achieving on-chip quantum interference, entanglement and gate operations on spatially encoded states, culminating in the demonstration of the Boson Sampling task on-chip [1]. While many of these demonstrations have relied on external sources to generate quantum states of light, which were then fed into a passive circuitry, a next step has been taken recently with the demonstration of active chips combining the generation and manipulation of spatially encoded states [2].