“…In this regard, entrepreneurial storytelling is central to legitimacy: narratives make the venture more understandable, demonstrate its compliance with institutional norms, elaborate its resources, and arouse excitement and other positive emotions among key stakeholders (Cornelissen and Clarke, 2010;Fisher, Neubert and Brunell, 2021;Garud, Schildt and Lant, 2014a;Zott and Huy, 2007). However, while the cultural entrepreneurship literature has focused on diverse cultural objects in entrepreneurs' sensemaking and entrepreneurial storytelling (Garud, Gehman and Giuliani, 2014b;Gehman and Soublière, 2017;Soublière and Lockwood, 2022), the narration of places has been largely neglected (Muñoz et al, 2021;Welter and Baker, 2021). Places, understood as locations, material entities, and signifiers of symbolic meaning (Gieryn, 2000) can feature in entrepreneurs' understanding of their own situations and their efforts to portray it to their stakeholders (Cornelissen and Clarke, 2010).…”