Day's End at The Whitney Museum

New York
,
United States

“Day’s End,” by American artist David Hammons, at Pier 52 (also known as Gansevoort Peninsula) in New York City pays homage to deconstructionist Gordon Matta-Clark who, in 1975, cut five openings into the shed that formerly occupied the site.

Special Structure

Client: Whitney Museum of American Art

Artist: David Hammons

Structural Engineer: Guy Nordenson and Associates

Construction and General Contractor: Hunter Roberts Construction Group 

Steel Fabricator: Mariani Metal Fabricators Ltd.

Day's End at The Whitney Museum
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Design-Built Structural Solution

CAST CONNEX offers design-build services for custom-cast steel nodes and components. We leverage steel casting manufacturing to offer our clients unparalleled opportunities for optimization and beauty in structural form.
Day's End at The Whitney Museum
Hammons’ artwork conveys an open structure created with brushed stainless posts and cast stainless steel nodes that exactly shadow the framework, proportions, and location of the original structure.
Day's End at The Whitney Museum
The stainless-steel structure is minimal, ethereal and slender with 8.625-inch diameter members that span 65 feet. Sea level and storm scenarios were taken into account in an effort to guarantee structural longevity.
Day's End at The Whitney Museum
CAST CONNEX engineered and supplied a number of super duplex stainless custom steel castings showcasing six unique geometries to be used to connect the HSS members of this structure.

Products Used On the Project