The planet is facing massive climate change effects; Canada itself is warming at an unprecedented rate in comparison to the rest of the world. However as inland populations living in Montreal, we don’t often see these effects day-to-day. In addition, the media surrounding the future is often saturated with images of climate apocalypse that annihilate us. This makes it increasingly difficult to visualize a world that isn’t hopeless, and how we will survive in climate change. In this research-creation project, I question if there are hands-on methods to visualize a future world, where we thrive despite, and alongside, climate challenges. This research-creation project looks at the interacting aspects of climate change, critical mapping, speculative futurisms, and marginalized community voices through the creation of a ‘future map’ of Montreal. To explore this, I collect interviews from 6 community members/activists and render their visions into 360 images built into a digital map. I provide context with theories of world-building, mapping, and the creation process itself, bringing to life the participants’ visions of the future. I then describe how marginalized viewpoints and anti-oppressive frameworks build a better, tangible vision of tomorrow. I use the concept of remediation to explain the process of building futures in order to ‘fix’ society. To summarize, a critical mapping and 360 experience of Montreal under climate change will increase the body of work on climate change projection from a community perspective, and explore more embodied, hopeful, and grounded experience of climate futures.