Sited in the Cleveland neighborhood of Slavic Village, Collective Reality: Image Without Ownership was an installation designed to prototype an augmented reality application that enabled citizens to engage in conversations about urban development by creating images of possible neighborhood futures. Composing a material palette of figural foam elements, steel frames, and digital objects that were crowdsourced from community residents, the installation included tablets, loaded with our AR application programmed to recognize the foam figures when viewed through the steel frames. When the figures were recognized, the software prompted the user to interact with and manipulate digital models that appeared on screen of objects selected from around Slavic Village by community members. In doing so, the community members modeled modes of interaction important to the development of the Collective Reality software. Conventional urban development requires the expenditure of capital and significant resources, doubling the privilege of wealth with the exclusive ability to imagine the future. Our application is a community design tool that decouples wealth and imagination in order to empower citizens from all socioeconomic backgrounds. Leads: McLain Clutter, Cyrus Peñarroyo, Xavi Aguirre, Mark Lindquist Partnering Organizations: LAND Studio, Slavic Village Development Assistants, Software Development: Frank Deaton, Oliver Popadich Assistants, Fabrication: Lucas Denit, Liz Feltz, Reed Miller, Jacob Pyles, Anika Shah Year: 2019