GlassGallery
GlassGallery is an interactive 3D atlas built around the world of Mirror’s Edge Catalyst, treating Glass City as a living gallery of places, routes, memories and discoveries.
Using data recovered from the discontinued companion map, I rebuilt Glass City as a navigable browser experience for mobile and desktop. What began as a revived map quickly evolved into a location-based gallery system: a way to preserve viewpoints, screenshots, music, hidden climbs, architectural fragments and personal memories inside a virtual city.
Every entry begins with a place. What happens there gives it meaning: a forgotten rooftop, a rare skyline, a hard-to-reach climb, a quiet meditation spot, an environmental glyph, or a track attached to a specific vista.
GlassGallery does not treat the city as a checklist. It treats virtual places as gallery objects — things you can visit, document, listen to, return to and remember.
A gallery is not only a room. It can also be a city, a hidden climb, an architectural fragment, a skyline view, or a memory attached to a place.
Key Features
A fully navigable, zoomable and rotatable browser reconstruction of Glass City.
Each place can hold images, notes, coordinates, camera presets and contextual meaning.
Scenic viewpoints and city panoramas preserved as gallery entries.
Quiet first-person viewpoints designed for stillness, reflection and revisiting.
Music attached to specific spatial coordinates, turning tracks into places.
Difficult climbs and hidden routes documented as skill-based discoveries.
Environmental graphics, symbols and visual details preserved as discoveries.
Personal screenshots and experiences can remain attached to the places where they happened.
Discovery Types
Scenic viewpoints and memorable city panoramas.
Locations where music is tied to atmosphere and place.
Quiet places for stillness, observation and return.
Hidden graphics, symbols and environmental details embedded in the city.
Hard-to-reach climbs and routes that require skill, perception and exploration.
Moments that become meaningful because they remain attached to a specific place.