cyberSPACE is an immersive experience that uses interactive projection mapping with spatial audio to transport the audience into an atmosphere of the future. The design heavily draws from the relatively new aesthetic of “cyberpunk”, a mixture of distant future and punk aspects that combine to create stunning visuals. The experience takes place in an unused bus stop in Lincoln, Nebraska. This is the whole idea behind the “backlot - backloop”, an ideology revolving around the fact that large cultural shifts create the opportunity to turn something old, the “backlot”, and transform it into something totally new. cyberSPACE also follows the guidelines of nanotourism as defined by nanotourism.org, “a creative critique to the current environmental, social and economic downsides of conventional tourism, as a participatory, locally oriented, bottom-up alternative.” I worked alongside two of Lincoln’s biggest art names, Charly and Nancy Friedman. They co-own and run an interdisciplinary art gallery named FIENDISH PLOTS, hosting artists from all around the world. Charly and Nancy offered me advice on how one should go about creating and directing an experience such as cyberSPACE. The whole conception of cyberSPACE revolved around one question. How can we help fight the blanketing feeling of depression covid has caused, and how can we do that in a way that uses the theories of the backlot- backloop as well as nanotourism? cyberSPACE was my answer.