PD will set each clip to the default camera view when you place it on the timeline. If that happens to be the view you want, you don't need to take any other steps.
However if it's off to one side or the other, you'll want to use the 360° Start View Setting tool to place that area in front of the viewer.
(It can be tedious to manually put in the same start settings for every clip, so the easiest way to repeat that setting for all the other clips is to actually make a copy of the first clip and paste 12 more many copies on the timeline.
Then drag each new clip one at a time onto the timeline copy and choose Replace so that the new clip inherits the start view settings. Note that you'll need to manually lengthen all the clips that are longer than the "master" clip, since using Replace will automatically trim each clip to the same length as the "master" copy. You're free to change the length of any clip at any time, I just wanted to warn you about the possibility of the ends of longer clips being auto-trimmed.)
As far as planning your viewer experience, each time you place a clip (and if you split a clip into 2 or more sections), you have the
opportunity to reframe the center view - but if you align all clips facing the same way there's no transition for the viewer because the individual timeline clips will all become one seamless produced video.
In other words, if the viewer has decided that they want to look out the left window, that's the view they'll keep seeing throught the entire video until and unless they decide to change the view.