
Denver's dashing new landmark consists of 2,700 tons of steel in an awesome angle. The Denver Art Museum expansion was inspired by the Rockies and designed to be a signature landmark for the city of Denver. The plans called for transforming more than 2,700 tons of steel into a complicated skeleton that would support and create oblique angles. Keeping the whole thing together was Tekla Structures.
The Denver Art Museum (DAM) expansion, also called the Frederic C. Hamilton Building, was designed by well-known architect Daniel Libeskind


