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Crystal Bridges Photos

Crystal Bridges MuseumCrystal Bridges: An Innovative Design

Designed by world-renowned architect, Moshe Safdie, Crystal Bridges will be both museum and culture center. As a place that will house diverse activities indoors and outdoors for all age groups, the facility will offer a wide range of spaces conducive to interaction and with varied character. The site selected is a ravine fed by Crystal Spring, steeply sloping with mature trees – extraordinarily beautiful, yet fragile. The challenge of the design was to create a powerful sense of place in harmony with its setting, and to connect it to its surrounding community, including downtown Bentonville.

A Campus Within Crystal Ponds

Two structures, which are both dams and bridges, will be placed across the ravine forming two great ponds. Additional structures will be nestled into the steeply sloping terrain on either side, containing galleries, classrooms, a library, a lecture hall, curatorial and administrative offices. The bridge structures will contain galleries in the northern bridge and reception and hospitality facilities in the southern one. Further south within the pond, on axis with the bridges, will be a Great Hall, a multipurpose public space.

A great variety of outdoor public spaces will interweave the complex – protected courtyards, promenades along the water’s edge with both formal and informal sculpture gardens. The rest of the site, approximately 100 acres, will be developed as a public park, including trails and picnic grounds, well connected to the campus. The complex will have two principal entrances. An east entrance will connect Crystal Bridges to the regional roads, provide underground parking and truck docks and serve the public arriving by car. A west entrance will be formed by a tower and a pedestrian bridge spanning across the treetops to the hillside ridge, joining the trail system that connects to downtown Bentonville, a 15-minute walk.

The design aims to enhance and protect the natural beauty of the site and to achieve a high level of sustainability in the use of construction materials and methods, maximizing reliance on daylight, water and flood management. Plant life will be integrated into the architecture, creating a constant dialogue between the building and the landscape.

The buildings will incorporate primarily wood, harvested from the region, and concrete structures. Innovated systems of construction of laminated wood and wood lattice space-frames will be used in the bridge buildings, the Great Hall and the roofs of the gallery structures. Glass will be used generously, and it will always be well-shaded. The architecture seeks to create an expression of the region, its fauna and flora, and particularly its history and culture.

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Goldilocks and the Three Bears
Friday, 2008 09:25 AM

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Bears in the Woods
Wednesday, 2008 02:32 PM

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Meet Amy Allen, Our Library Intern
Monday, 2008 08:25 AM

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Crystal Bridges Staff Visits Site
Monday, 2008 10:04 AM

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Painting by Missouri Native Thomas Ha...
Thursday, 2008 08:22 AM

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Crystal Bridges Permanent Collection ...
Wednesday, 2008 04:54 PM

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Crystal Bridges at the Massey to Host...
Wednesday, 2008 08:45 AM

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Group of Bears Graces Compton Gardens
Wednesday, 2008 03:56 PM

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