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 evening events 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 through proximity and listening. 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—fostering accessibility, slow attention, and encouraged collective reflection through sound, material, and proximity.