 Rensselaer's collaborative research Augmented Immersive Virtual Environment Laboratory, or Cravelab, is a large multimodal space designed with groups of researchers in mind and is intended for the presentation of both realistic and abstract data. The space is outfitted with eight projectors to cover the 14 foot tall, nearly 360 degree screen, which is acoustically transparent for the horizontal array of 128 loudspeakers behind it. The visuals are treated as a single desktop display, allowing content creation to be an intuitive process. Panoramic images taken at different locations can be stitched together to recreate these places right in the lab. Now, to streamline this process, this project extracts and formats street view imagery to instantly display realistic locations from across the globe. To expand the user interaction with the space, the program uses cognitive services from IBM to allow the user to request a new location. Asking for Diamondhead Crater tells the system to find, format and display the nearest imagery available to the desired location. Going from Paris to New York is as simple as requesting the Onassis Reservoir. Using the map on the screen, the user is able to navigate and specify with greater detail which panoramic image is to look at. The system also retrieves the current weather conditions from IBM's Weather.com API. This information alters the qualities of a sonification of artificially generated sounds such as wind or rain to deepen the sense of immersion.