As bandwidth burgeons and computing muscle continues to grow, cyberspace places will present themselves in increasingly multisensory and engaging ways. They will look, sound, and feel more realistic, they will enable richer self-representations of their users, they will respond to user actions in real time and in complex ways, and they will be increasingly elaborate and artfully designed. We will not just look at them; we will feel present in them. We can expect them to evolve into the elements of cyberspace construction – constituents of a new architecture without tectonics and a new urbanism freed from the constraints of physical space.