Steel House Brings a 13,000-Square-Foot Park to Office Life
Steel House anchors 3100 Brighton Boulevard in Denver, CO, United States with a confident steel profile and an uncommon amenity landscape. Designed by MA | Morris Adjmi Architects, the office complex wraps a private, elevated park and pulls daylight deep inside through factory-inspired windows. The building leans into RiNo’s industrial lineage while shifting the daily rhythm of work toward fresh air, movement, and informal gathering.








Morning light grazes steel and glass as the tower marks a clear arrival. From the upper levels, a planted terrace opens toward the city’s ridgeline and sky.
This office building in Denver’s RiNo Arts District, by MA | Morris Adjmi Architects, centers daily work around indoor-outdoor activity and shared amenities. The program wraps a 13,000-square-foot elevated park, balancing workrooms with terraces, lounges, and wellness areas that maintain contact with air, sun, and landscape.
Tower And Park
A steel tower rises as a neighborhood marker and pulls tenants toward the entrance. Its height and articulation nod to nearby grain silos, while landscaped loggias soften the industrial profile and cue a more social rhythm. The building then bends around the largest private elevated park in RiNo, turning a roof plate into a planted commons for meetings, lunch, or a few quiet minutes between calls.
Windows And Terraces
Factory-inspired divided light windows, 11 feet high, wash floors with daylight. A metal channel grid organizes the façade and tempers the building’s scale, giving each level a legible order. Because of the massing, every floor gains a private terrace, so teams step outside without leaving their level—short breaks that recalibrate focus and energy during the day.
Lobby And Lounge
Inside, materials stay honest: stone, wood, steel, and concrete. The lobby folds those cues into a vertical green wall on a steel frame, echoing the tower while drawing nature into circulation routes. Nearby, a multipurpose tenant lounge brings a barista bar and direct access to a furnished terrace, linking more than 10,000 square feet of interior amenities to open air with an easy stride.
Wellness On Six
The sixth floor turns movement into a daily habit. A fitness center lines up with a multi-use sports court and a climbing wall, extending straight onto The Park for cooldowns and impromptu meetups. A dedicated movement studio uses an operable glass wall to slide open to a yoga terrace—one gesture that merges fresh air with instruction and resets the tempo of work.
Landscape And Views
Future Green Studios shapes the outdoor rooms with planting, lawns, and furnished terraces. Paths stitch together vantage points for cinematic views of the Denver skyline, setting up casual collisions and small gatherings across the day. Landscape and program work in tandem: the park becomes a true workplace, not an add-on.
By dusk, the tower reads as a calm beacon, its grid catching the last light. Inside, the green wall and warm finishes soften edges as people head out—the city just beyond the terraces.
Photography courtesy of MA | Morris Adjmi Architects
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