Seven Sentinels

Location
  • Kansas City, Missouri

Seven Sentinels kinetic sculpture made in galvanized steel. Each of the parking gate sculptures salute exiting drivers.

Photo by Bradley Cramer for The City of Fountains Foundation.

Detail of the kinetic sculpture Seven Sentinels, a public artwork by Matthew Dehaemers. ART WALL SECTIONS ARE MANUFACTURED IN THE ZAHNER SHOP FACILITY.

PHOTO © MATT DEHAEMERS.

Photo © Matt Dehaemers.

Stills of Seven Sentinels opening.

Stills of Seven Sentinels opening.

Photo © Matt Dehaemers.

Stills of Seven Sentinels opening.

Photo © Matt Dehaemers.

Aerial photograph of the kinetic sculpture entitled Seven Sentinels, a public artwork by Matthew Dehaemers.

PHOTO © GOOGLE.

Seven Sentinels kinetic sculpture. Each of the parking gate sculptures salute exiting drivers.

Photo © Matt Dehaemers.

Project DataProject Data

Design

Artist

Attributes

Scale
Location
Kansas City, Missouri

Key Facts

Address
7750 E Front St, Kansas City, MO, USA

Project Description

Seven Sentinels artwork in Kansas City

Seven Sentinels is a kinetic artwork and permanent public installation by Matt Dehaemers. Zahner provided engineering, art fabrication, installation for the public artwork, located in Kansas City, Missouri.

The installation consists of seven equidistant, elongated and oversized parking gates. These were manufactured several times the height of a standard parking gate. Each of the seven pieces were engineered to individually automatically open as a kinetic sculpture. As visitors exit the facility, each parking gate rises to salute drivers leaving the New Municipal Vehicle Impound Tow Lot Facility.

The parking gates were each crafted from powder-coated aluminum and galvanized steel. The sculptures react to incoming traffic, lifting their gates as cars pass underneath. The kinetic movement is a reference to soldiers performing a sword ceremony, and as such shows respect to vehicles exiting the lot. Seven Sentinels was completed in 2008. It is the first public artwork collaboration between Dehaemers and Zahner. Dehaemers’ second collaboration with Zahner, Catalyst, was completed in 2010 and stands at the intersection of 31st Street and Troost in Kansas City.

Each gate tower is 16 feet tall and the each gate is 12 feet long. The towers are placed 30 feet apart for a total of 180 feet from end to end. The artwork is made in galvanized steel, with powder-coated aluminum gate bars, parking control mechanisms, concrete, and a surface-mounted loop detector to trigger the artwork’s kinetic movement.

Recent Projects

Mayfair at the Grove

Mayfair at the Grove

The Ballpark at America First Square

The Ballpark at America First Square

Cincinnati Open Lindner Family Tennis Center

Cincinnati Open Lindner Family Tennis Center

Google Bay View Campus

Google Bay View Campus

James Turrell Skyspace

James Turrell Skyspace

Schwab Residential Center at Stanford Graduate School of Business

Schwab Residential Center at Stanford Graduate School of Business

Scottsdale Civic Center

Scottsdale Civic Center

UT Arlington Cooper Street Bridge

UT Arlington Cooper Street Bridge

Grand Foyer in the Ambassador Building at Embassy Gardens

Grand Foyer in the Ambassador Building at Embassy Gardens

Mount Sinai Medical Center Parking Garage

Mount Sinai Medical Center Parking Garage