At the Princeton Arts Council on Paul Robeson Place, I collaborated with high school volunteers to transform the building’s lobby into a multimedia mylar environment called Interaural Space, centering youth participation, care, and shared authorship. Installed over several months, we held special nights where the space functioned as a public listening site ~ inviting community members to sit or lie within the mylar and release. Inside the abstract, reflective environment, attention softened as everyone shared space with each other; forming a relational field. Those evenings were broadcast live on WPRB, extending the installation beyond the room into the radiowaves. As with my ongoing mylar installations, the environment operated as a social and sensory condition for slow attention, and encouraged collective reflection.