My research-creation also lightly touches on the field of psychogeography which is a process that explores the everyday activity of human beings in geographical environments and the effects these spatial-temporal experiences have on our feelings and behavior (Christie, n.d.). This informed how I attended to the sensory-perceptual experience of the built environment in public spaces. In the documentation phase of my research, I also attended and reflected on how I was implicitly and explicitly directed and choreographed into the built environment. Influenced by artists such as Noemie Lafrance, whose creations explore psychogeography and my own interest in site-elicited choreography, it felt appropriate to create an arts-based research-creation that reconstitutes data and situates the living-sensing-perceiving body in a public space.