Predock's Vision
The Art Museum’s rotunda, a circular room reminiscent of an ancient Native American kiva, serves as a transition between the cone and the rectangular galleries. On the summer solstice, a beam of sunlight penetrates the space at exactly noon, illuminating a silver dollar in the center of the floor. Other carefully placed windows create a rhythm of light throughout the building and offer picturesque views of the Laramie Valley Basin and surrounding mountain ranges. The simple form and high ceilings of the Museum’s main gallery create a space of quiet reflection, minimizing distractions and allowing visitors to absorb the art on view. A long corridor borders the main gallery, connecting it to four smaller exhibition spaces and the sculpture terrace.
The Loggia in the American Heritage Center represents an early forest with three-story columns that resemble giant trees surrounding a welcoming fireplace. The flue of the fireplace rises up through the top of the cone with each floor level opening rotating 45 degrees, creating a spiraling ascent to the sky-lit center.