Denver City Hall (officially the Denver City and County Building) was designed by a coalition of thirty-nine leading local architects formed in 1924 as the Allied Architects Association and finally opened in 1932.
The building has a neoclassical style that reflected Denver’s aspirations to be the ‘Rome of the Rockies’. The stone edifice has a symmetrical H plan that measures 133 metres wide and 84 metres deep but only 27 metres high, to avoid blocking Denver’s cherished mountain view. The massive pedimented entry portico has six 15 metre Corinthian columns. The City and County Building’s most striking feature is the two four-story wings, fronted by Ionic columns, arching forward from the central structure.
The textures have been created in Substance Painter and Designer specifcally for this model to give it a high quality, realistic look.
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