For the past six years, Google Street View has been taking users, virtually, to places they may not otherwise be able to go. Today, it expands its universe to places that don’t actually exist.

The Street View application has just added 360 degree views of Diagon Alley, the fictional cobblestone wizarding marketplace from the Harry Potter books and films, where all manner of magical paraphernalia can be acquired.

For the films, Diagon Alley was built bricks-and-mortar in precise detail on a soundstage at Warner Brothers’ London studios. On Street View, users can swoop in from above the studios’ expansive grounds and into the dark confines of the pre-Victorian marketplace, where they can pass by Potter fan icons like Gringotts Wizarding Bank, Ollivanders Wand Shop and Mr. Mulpepper’s Apothecary.

Though the alley is fictional, the set is very real, and no attempt is made to varnish it as anything but. Street View shows the set in bright light, under the exposed steel strut supports of the soundstage, where lighting and sound equipment dangle expectantly.

Diagon Alley isn’t the first fictional interior Street View has added in recent days. Earlier this week, the application added images from Battleship Island, the fictional lair of Javier Bardem’s villain character in the most recent James Bond film Skyfall.

The expansion into interiors and fictive locations comes as Street View may well be running out of real road. Since it launched as a five-city pilot project in 2007, Street View has mapped much of Europe and North America, not to mention Antarctica.

Much of Africa remains outside its purview for the logistical difficulties of running its multi-camera head vehicles on poorly-maintained roadways there. And, of course, all of China remains off the Street View map; Google is prohibited from operating in the world’s most populous country by the ruling Communist regime there.

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