This note reproduces the company’s Community Interest Statement as filed on the CIC36 at incorporation. The CIC36 is a public document, placed on the public record at Companies House. It is the declaration the Office of the Regulator of Community Interest Companies judges the company against — both at registration and, on an ongoing basis, through the annual CIC34. The text below is verbatim.

Section A — Community interest statement: beneficiaries

The company’s activities will provide benefit to … the wider community through the creation of immersive, interactive art installations using light and sound, controlled in real-time by responsive technologies.

Our installations are open to all ages and abilities, but they are designed fundamentally to serve a specific section of the community: autistic people, people with sensory processing differences, and disabled people (and their families) for whom mainstream cultural events and experiences are overwhelming, overstimulating environments that offer very limited opportunities for meaningful participation, self-expression, or social connection.

We also serve individuals and families who, for cultural or religious reasons, do not participate in some or all of the traditions of Halloween, Guy Fawkes, Christmas, or New Year - and for whom events that celebrate these offer little alignment with their values or traditions. During these periods, the cultural calendar is dominated by evening events anchored to these specific traditions. We provide alternatives within heritage gardens, arboretums, and other outdoor and indoor settings — including churches, cathedrals, and other historic or community spaces — that are not tied to any tradition or celebration, opening up experiences that would otherwise not exist for these communities.

Our events are open to everyone, but our installations are designed specifically to serve these communities.

Activity 1

Research, design and create immersive, interactive art installations using light and sound, controlled in real-time by responsive technologies.

Deliver installations in heritage gardens, arboretums, parks, festival environments, churches, cathedrals, and other indoor and outdoor settings, timed to coincide with periods dominated by mainstream cultural events such as Halloween, Guy Fawkes, Christmas, and New Year, providing an alternative for those for whom these traditions do not serve.

How the activity benefits the community:

Our installations remove barriers for autistic people, people with sensory processing differences, and disabled people (and their families) by creating calm, responsive experiences designed to accommodate their needs. We foster presence, connection, and reflection rather than spectacle and overstimulation. The interactive nature of the installations enables individual creative expression, group connection, and co-creation. For those who have difficulties with verbal expression, interacting with the art becomes a form of meaningful communication and co-creation.

For those who, for cultural or religious reasons, do not participate in some or all of the traditions of Halloween, Guy Fawkes, Christmas, or New Year, we deliver an alternative experience that is not anchored to any specific tradition or celebration. Our partnership model supports our host sites and brings new audiences and revenue to these places during the periods when visitor numbers naturally dip.

By presenting neutral installations within churches, cathedrals, and other spaces associated with specific faiths or traditions, we open these buildings to people who would not normally enter them. Visitors can experience and appreciate the architecture, history, and atmosphere of these spaces without any connection to the religion or tradition they represent — an opportunity that may not otherwise exist for these communities.

Activity 2

Conduct research and development into responsive technologies and the relationship between sound, frequency, physical environments and human nervous systems — adapted to serve our beneficiaries through the medium of our installations. Leverage advances in artificial intelligence to research, extend accessibility, enhance responsiveness and ultimately create positive outcomes for our beneficiaries and general audience.

Facilitate visits or arrange outreach experiences for schools and community groups, with particular emphasis on SEN schools, children’s and adults’ respite services, and care homes.

How the activity benefits the community:

Our research into the relationship between sound, light, frequency, physical environments and human nervous systems directly informs how we design installations that are calm, therapeutic, and attuned to the needs of sensitive audiences. Combined with advances in responsive technology and artificial intelligence, this allows us to create experiences that monitor and adapt in real time to the actions of our audiences — making our installations more accessible, more responsive, more calming and therapeutic and more inclusive than would otherwise be possible.

We facilitate visits for schools and community groups, with particular emphasis on SEN schools, children’s and adults’ respite services, and care homes — offering tailored access arrangements including exclusive sessions outside of public opening times where required. Where attending a public installation is not practical, we bring adapted experiences directly into these settings, ensuring we can reach our audiences regardless of the barriers they face in accessing public events.

Surplus

If the company makes any surplus, it will be reinvested into further community benefit activities, including access initiatives, programme development, research and development, and infrastructure that supports future delivery. Any surplus donated externally will go to CICs and charities with similar objectives, with the consent of the CIC Regulator.

Section C — Excluded company declaration

We/I, the undersigned, declare that the company in respect of which this application is made will not be: (a) a political party; (b) a political campaigning organisation; or (c) a subsidiary of a political party or of a political campaigning organisation.

Section D — Signatures

Signed by all three directors via DocuSign: Daniel John Gauden (29 March 2026), James Andrew Silvanus-Davis (30 March 2026), Karenna May Magee (30 March 2026).

The ongoing community interest test

The community interest test is set out in section 35 of the Companies (Audit, Investigations and Community Enterprise) Act 2004 and expanded in Regulations 3, 4 and 5. It is not a one-off hurdle cleared at registration — the company must continue to satisfy it for as long as it remains a CIC, and demonstrates this each year through the CIC34 report (see reporting & transparency). Where the company carries out commercial work, the test requires that work to serve, or fund, the community benefit declared above; the CIC34 is where that link is shown.