Water + Life Museums celebrate the link between Southern California’s 
water infrastructure and the evolution of life, stressing how that link 
is critical to developing the resource stewardship required of a 
sustainable society. Sustainable energy systems—-including a 3,000-PV 
array-—as well as materials and methods were employed. The building 
expects a LEED Platinum rating. The museums pose a striking profile of 
metal and glass at the eastern entrance to Diamond Valley Lake. Drawing 
from the bold imagery of turbines and generators, the modern design is 
in the tradition of the monumental, honorific architecture of the 
Metropolitan Water District, which administers the water infrastructure 
and gave the land for the project. Steel-clad monoliths blaze across 
each façade, contrasting with the desert skyline. Translucent banners 
printed with pixilated images hang across 10,000 square feet of 
east-facing glass. Latticed loggias give a dramatic processional feeling
 through filtered light.
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