This paper presents new research on the collaborative relationality between people and place in the field of spectrality studies. Existing as the kinds of involuntary impressions and uncanny atmospheres that do not easily lend themselves to sense and reason-making, haunted experience is emplaced in a “where.” This research redresses the over-determinism of temporality in the literature on haunting by paying critical and creative attention to the ghost’s spatial dimensions. Using the city of Perth as a field site, I examine what the place of Perth, including the case study of Brookfield Place, contributes to knowledge on the spatiality of the ghost. I do this by employing the traditional ethnographic research methods of in-depth interviews and participant observation, as well as archival research and the psychogeographic method of drifting. However, as the uncertainty of the ghost asks for uncertain approaches, my research is informed with what I have termed a haunted methodological approach. This has meant developing haunted research techniques in the interpretation and textual representation of the material collected, resulting in the use of ethnographic fragments as a textual form that can most closely articulate the plural open-endedness of a haunted social reality. What comes out of this research is that the spatiality of haunting reveals place to be more radically indeterminate than previously theorised, and that places (and our lives within them) are better served by accepting their unfinished, in-process and relational qualities.