The Extension to the Denver Art
Museum, The Frederic C. Hamilton Building, is an
expansion and addition to the existing museum, designed by the Italian
Architect Gio Ponti, which opened in 1971.
The 146,000-square-foot
extension, which opened in October 2006, currently houses the Modern and
Contemporary art collections as well as the collections of Oceanic and African
Art.
The Hamilton
Building’s design recalls the peaks of
the Rocky Mountains and geometric rock crystals found in the foothills near Denver. The materials of
the building closely relate to the existing context as well as introducing
innovative new materials, such as the 9,000 titanium panels which cover the
building’s surface and reflect the brilliant Colorado sunlight.
The project is designed as
part of a composition of public spaces, monuments and gateways in this
developing part of the city, tying together downtown, the Civic Center,
and forming a strong connection to the golden triangle neighborhood.
The Museum has dealt with
the challenges of this space by using it to display contemporary sculpture;
additionally, the Museum has used it to exhibit site-specific paintings by
artists who enjoy creating work accommodated by these unorthodox volumes. The
use of dynamically connected glass and titanium-clad triangular shapes is
consistent with Libeskind’s vocabulary.
These shapes not only
create an urban geometry that reaches into and reflects Colorado’s blue sky and help to unify the
downtown area by complementing the surrounding architecture: the adjacent
Michael Graves Denver Public Library and Libeskind’s own Museum Residences,
which are across the plaza from the museum extension.
Daniel Libeskind described
the inspiration for his design: “It’s so closely rooted in the history of the
topography, the light, and the spirit of the city of Denver. Denver
is a new city, Denver is an open city that gives you kind of
a breathlessness when you come here. You see the world in a beautiful way, and
that’s what the building mirrors: it mirrors that spirit. It comes from the
excitement and the beauty of this place.”
“One of the challenges of
building the Denver Art Museum was to work closely and respond to the
extraordinary range of transformations in light, coloration, atmospheric
effects, temperature and weather conditions unique to this City. I insisted
these be integrated not only functionally and physically, but culturally and
experientially for the benefit of the visitors’ experience.”
“The new building is not based on an idea of
style or the rehashing of ready made ideas or external shape because its
architecture does not separate the inside from the outside or provide a pretty
facade behind which a typical experience exists; rather this architecture has
an organic connection to the public at large and to those aspects of experience
that are also intellectual, emotional, and sensual.
The integration of these
dimensions for the enjoyment and edification of the public is achieved in a
building that respects the hand crafted nature of architecture and its
immediate communication from the hand, to the eye, to the mind. After all, the
language of architecture beyond words themselves is the laughter of light,
proportion and materiality.”
Location:
Denver, Colorado,
USA
Architects:
Studio Daniel Libeskind
Structural
Engineer: Arup (Los Angeles)
Structural
Connection Design: Structural
Consultants, Inc.
Mechanical
Air: Arup-Los Angeles
Mechanical/Electrical:
MKK Engineers and Arup (Los Angeles)
Structural
Engineers: ARUP (Los Angeles)
Structural
Connection Design: Structural
Consultants, Inc.
Civil
Engineers: JF Sato
and Associates
Interior
Designers: Studio
Daniel Libeskind with Davis
Partnership
Landscape
Architects: Studio
Daniel Libeskind with Davis
Partnership
Lighting
Consultant: George
Sexton and Associates
Theater
Consultant: Auerbach
Pollock Friedlander
Acoustical
Consultant: ARUP (Los Angeles)
Area:
146,000 sq ft
Year:
2006
Photo:
Bitter Bredt, DAM, SDL,
Michele Nastasi














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