




The Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art has completed a major expansion to its campus by Safdie Architects, the same office behind the original venue from 2011.
The expansion in Bentonville, Arkansas, spans 114,000 square feet, increasing the museum’s footprint by 50 percent. A new bridge designed by Callaghan Horiuchi connects the two galleries and hosts a new 40-seat cafe called Quarts+Honey. Callaghan Horiuchi also designed new lobbies, lounges, transition spaces, and reflection areas.

Safdie Architects designed two collection galleries, a temporary exhibition gallery, exhibition spaces, art studios, a community room, cafe, and a new outdoor plaza.
Thirty-five percent of the building is below-grade in order to reduce thermal loads. Buro Happold provided engineering services and Coen + Partners was the landscape architect of record.
“The inauguration of this second phase marks the culmination of a two-decade collaboration—an evolving dialogue between architect, patron, and institution—that has shaped not only a building, but a shared vision for what a museum can be,” Moshe Safdie said in a statement.

Crystal Bridges opened in 2011 and, in 2021, the expansion by Safdie Architects was announced. Construction commenced in 2022.
Since 2022, Callaghan Horiuchi was selected to redesign interior spaces of the Safdie-designed facility, and Studio Bryan Hanes designed a nature trail that weaves through the verdant campus that takes full advantage of its Ozark surroundings.
Up the road, Polk Stanley Wilcox and OSD completed the Alice L. Walton School of Medicine at Crystal Bridges in 2025. And Marlon Blackwell Architects finished the Heartland Whole Health Institute and a new parking complex that same year.
The new expansion by Safdie Architects is the latest addition to the art hub. It extends the museum’s winding circulation with a “figure-eight” over its two stream-fed ponds spanning a ravine, Crystal Bridges said.

A new north entrance now offers multilevel access to both the museum and grounds. Southern yellow pine beams, sloping roof forms with overhangs, floor-to-ceiling glass, and copper cladding emulate the landscape and afford optimal views of the outdoors.
The expansion sports a facade of architectural concrete with striations courtesy of thin cedar bands inserted between the concrete slabs.

Gently curved skylights with louver diffusion illuminate the art galleries. This gives the building a distinctive sawtooth profile in elevation.
“Beyond broadening its program, the expansion extends and deepens the museum’s connection to nature—embedding new spaces for community, learning, and the display of art within an architectural language shaped by the region’s terrain,” Safdie said.

The first exhibition inside the temporary exhibition is a Keith Haring retrospective.
Yayoi Kasama’s Infinity Mirrored Room and Teresita Fernandez Manigua’s Mirror will be sited in the new Contemporary American Art Gallery.
