You mean...let me check my notes here...
The open, unsecured, curtilage-lacking outdoors lot of a business without clear public/private boundaries, which the general public can access on and off business hours, on which there is not even reasonable expectation of privacy due to aforementioned openness and lack of curtilage? That one?
The one it turns out that no, in fact, Rittenhouse had not been invited to (something entered into evidence by testimony last week)? I mean, even had the shooting happened on that lot in the first place?
The one the cops dispersed Rittenhouse and the other gun-toting whackos from once and barred him from reentry?
And, let me check my notes again...
The later confrontation, which took place in the middle of a city street.
Those?
I mean, the "city street" part of it all rather speaks for itself. Other than that, even had the shooting occurred on the lot Rittenhouse claimed he was invited to (it didn't), the owner of that lot disputes that claim and testified Rittenhouse nor anyone else had been invited. Even then, Rittenhouse had been given a lawful order to disperse and not return to the lot he was never invited to by the cops, which he willfully disregarded. Even then, the shooting still occurred in a location that is the very definition of a public space, because ownership in the definition of a public space is less material than boundary demarcation and access.
You do get points simply for how spectacularly wrong you got every single facet of your argument, down to the minutest detail, though. The only thing sparing Rittenhouse from a criminal trespass charge and therefore nullifying his self-defense claim was...the car lot, by merit of being open to the public at all hours and lacking any form of curtilage, was a public space.