Based in Thurrock, CoDa (Collaborations Dance) is a socially driven female & disability-led company with an almost 10-year track record of creating partnership-based professional dance productions in non-theatre spaces, predominantly with neurologically disabled participants in hospital and community settings. By neurodisability, we mean anyone who has suffered injury to the brain leading to disability. CoDa was founded by Nikki Watson, a neurodiverse choreographer and performer, in 2013 following a series of exploratory artistic R&D to come to terms with her mother’s Multiple Sclerosis (MS) diagnosis and deterioration. CoDa delivers professional dance productions, closely aligned with a participatory methodology that creates safe spaces for neurologically disabled people (and their carers and families) to explore the experience of neurological disability and share this with audiences to encourage new dialogue and social change. Elise Phillips joined the company in 2017, drawing on their extensive experience in participatory arts, lived experience of learning disability, neurodiversity, and hearing impairment to refine the methodology & link it to academic research. Our mission is to tell stories that are real and celebrate life in a way that makes a difference. By deploying dance and immersive technology to provide a voice where this can be difficult, we help individuals be creative, express themselves & celebrate life through the joy of movement in their places on their terms. We use art to connect carers and families to improve social connection and sense of community, as well as stimulating audience conversations to overcome misconceptions & misunderstandings regarding disability, connecting art & wellbeing. Our professional work seeks to push the boundaries of dance by blurring digital and physical methods to shape a distinct visual aesthetic echoing the link between brain & body in an imperfect way. Since 2013, we have built a distinct reputation as specialists that integrate dance & neurodisability in a truly collaborative & participatory way in non-traditional dance settings. Through ongoing R&D, we have developed a practice of combining dance & technology through volumetric capture, virtual reality (VR) & augmented reality (AR). This gives a distinct & accessible visual aesthetic to our work that reflects neurodisabled people’s experience of delay between their brain & body in a playful, participatory way. Central to our dance practice is the notion that our neurologically disabled participants become Creative Consultants that inform & shape our projects, making them authentic & relevant. This also acts as a pathway into the organisation as dance artists. Our strong partnership with the Royal Hospital for Neuro-disability (RHN) in Wandsworth since 2019 has added medical rigour to our accessible approach, honed through weekly Dance for Neurology sessions with RHN & our academic work with UCL. Our unique inclusive approach to creating art is the result of 3 intersecting development journeys in dance, health, & immersive technology. This breadth of research has improved the quality of CoDa’s work whilst increasing accessibility for disabled participants, their families, & audiences, as well as building a network of artistic collaborators sharing our values.