Huzzah, Downton Abbey fans, for Thursday morn brings excellent news: the beloved PBS drama, which left the air in 2015, is coming back. Well, sort of.

This summer, “Downton Abbey: The Exhibition” will kick off in Singapore before making its way stateside in 2018. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the exhibition is backed by NBCUniversal, and its organizers plan to “connect visitors with their favorite characters, costumes, and locations, as well as showcase never-before-seen footage and historic moments.” In a statement, NBCUniversal International Studios president Michael Edelstein said that the exhibition would be “a multi-million dollar museum-quality experience.”

It’s no Netflix revival or movie deal, but the prospect of stepping into the world of Downton Abbey in a new way will still surely delight some Downton diehards—although until more information, such as ticket prices, becomes available, it’s not clear whether this affair will be within reach of everyone, or only the Crawleys among us.

Still, it’s one more way for those fans who don’t live anywhere near the castle in which the series was filmed to immerse themselves in the world of their favorite series. These kinds of immersive experiences have grown more popular in recent years; remember the time Hulu collaborated to re-create the apartment from Seinfeld, or the pop-up Central Perk that was erected in New York to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Friends? More recently, the Gilmore Girls fan festival in Washington Depot, Connecticut, allowed fans to celebrate the return of their favorite show in the town that inspired it. (Not to mention the subsequent coffee-shop takeover, which saw fans swarming shops across the country that had been dressed up as Luke’s Diner.)

A world as lush and aspirational as Downton’s seems like a perfect fit for this treatment. It’s a way to keep the series alive even after the story has come to an end—and one that can move forward regardless of those pesky unionized writers. Besides, as the Dowager Countess once said herself (perhaps quoting Oscar Wilde), “Nothing succeeds like excess.”