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This project investigates how visualization might capture the emotional complexity and simultaneity of place-based nostalgia, how two different generations view and remember the same region, and how the connections between nostalgia, place, and identity might be illuminated. Referencing Göran Bolin's framework of "media generations" and drawing on the sensory mapping and emotional cartography techniques of Kate McLean and Christian Nold, this project translates collected sentiment and memory data from two generations of PNW residents into an immersive "emotional landscape" map. Rather than mapping based on true coordinates and geographic markers, this digital visualization uses information-driven color, texture, movement, and abstract form to chart the Pacific Northwest as it exists in nostalgic memory, serving as an archival piece of a special place that used to exist or never really existed at all. Beyond the regional maps, this project invites anyone to visualize their own nostalgic experience and contribute to a public nostalgia database, where all memories accumulate into something collective and permanent.