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Thursday, March 13, 2008

Daniel Libeskind's first completed work

The Extension to the Denver Art Museum is an expansion and addition to the existing Denver Art Museum, designed by the Italian Architect Gio Ponti. The extension will house the Modern and Contemporary art collection as well as the collection of Architecture and Design and Oceanic Art. It will also become the main entrance to the entire museum complex and will have a representative lobby with access to shops, a cafe and theater.

The project is a Joint Venture between Daniel Libeskind and Davis Partnership of Denver. The team is overseeing the construction of the project and has been based in Denver since the completion of schematics. The studio has worked closely with the director, curators, the core exhibit team, the contact architect and the Board of Trustees to realize an innovative museum for the 21st Century.
The new building for the Denver Art Museum will be an icon whose character and form will attract a wide public to the museum complex. Nexus is conceived in close connection with the function and aesthetic of the existing Ponti museum as well as the entire Civic Center and the public library. The new building is a Nexus tying together downtown and civic center forming a strong connection to the golden triangle neighborhood. The project is not designed as a stand alone building but as part of a composition of public spaces, monuments and gateways in this developing part of the city, contributing to the synergy amongst neighbors large and intimate.

The materials of the building and plaza will be those closely relating to the existing context (local stone) as well as innovative new materials (titanium) which together will form spaces that connect local Denver tradition to the 21st Century.



The amazing vitality and growth of Denver from its foundation to the present inspires the form of new museum. Coupled with the magnificent topography with its breathtaking views of the sky and the Rocky Mountains, the dialogue between the boldness of construction and the romanticism of the landscape create a unique place in the world. The bold and forward looking engagement of the public in forging its own cultural, urban and spirited destiny is something that would strike anyone upon touching the soil of Colorado.

One of the challenges of building the Denver Art Museum is 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 insist these are to be integrated not only functionally and physically, but culturally and experientially for the benefit of the visitors' experience. The conjunction of the contemporary art experience with the uniqueness of the local conditions will form part of the decisions of materials, form, and space.



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