![Weird angles are no problem for the Convergence Station, Denver’s recently opened art space. ](https://cdn.statically.io/img/assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iowW6EXG3KT0/v1/-1x-1.jpg)
Weird angles are no problem for the Convergence Station, Denver’s recently opened art space.
Photos: Parrish Ruiz de Velasco. Illustration: Stephanie Davidson
Under a Denver Highway, Artists Find Space for the Surreal
The art collective Meow Wolf worked with local architects to create a trippy “Convergence Station” on a wedge-shaped site beneath a busy interstate.
(This story is part of “Look at That Building,” a Bloomberg CityLab series about everyday — and not-so-everyday — architecture. Read more from the series, and sign up to get the next story sent directly to your inbox.)
The site was not an easy sell. Sandwiched between overpasses in a highway cloverleaf in central Denver, any building would be framed on all sides by screaming traffic from Interstate 25 and a pair of off-ramps. The triangle-shaped lot was narrow — even for a flatiron building — and occupied by an old steel mill, which would need to be demolished before any new construction began.