
If you like your reggaeton loud and your visuals larger than life, downtown Phoenix has plans for you next Saturday. The Arizona Science Center is flipping its Dorrance DOME into a reggaeton-fueled cinematic ride for Art 360: A Bad Bunny Visual Album, a 30-minute immersive program that pairs original 360-degree visuals of Puerto Rico with Bad Bunny’s music. The experience includes a short walk-in pre-show and is scheduled to run through late June. Tickets are listed at $25 for general admission and $20 for members.
What You'll See
According to the Arizona Science Center, the show starts with a 10-minute walk-in sequence and then shifts into a 30-minute program of original immersive visuals and 360-degree cinematography set to Bad Bunny’s tracks. The center frames the Art 360 series as an after-hours lineup that layers music and visual albums across the dome’s wraparound LED surface.
High-Tech Dome, Local Debut
The Dorrance DOME runs on Cosm technology, using the company’s CX System and an 8K+ LED surface that the vendor highlights in its project profile as an early large-scale implementation in North America. Phoenix New Times reported that the space opened to the public in October 2025 after a major renovation, and Tammy Stewart told ABC15, "We're the second planetarium in the world to bring the Cosm Technology into our location here."
When To Go And Tickets
Tickets are available through the Arizona Science Center site, which lists the Art 360 program at $25 per person and $20 for members. The Downtown Phoenix Partnership also tags the event as an after-hours special and notes that general museum admission is not required for the dome shows. Visitors who need ADA seating are advised to call the center in advance.
Why It Matters For Phoenix
The Dorrance DOME’s mix of pop-culture showcases, sip-and-paint nights, and K-pop themed sessions signals a deliberate push to broaden museum audiences and bring fresh evening programming downtown. Coverage of the upgrade places the project in a wider trend of turning LED domes into cultural stages as well as science education hubs. Blooloop has profiled the Dorrance DOME in that larger context.









