Winged Refuge at the Colorado Springs Air Force Academy
Artist John Lajba came to Zahner with a machined cast-bronze model in-hand, which was used to accurately define the art fabrication of the commissioned monument to the United States Air Force.
Winged Refuge was manufactured using a semi-mirror stainless steel surface. The connection edges include both TIG-welded corners, as well as broken edges with Radius Reduction for the sharpest possible corner and edge connections. The two sculptures were fabricated in the Zahner shop, wrapped in blue-plastic netto, and shipped to the job site where each sculpture bolted into a raised stone section. The stone and concrete contractors then completed the rest of the ground surface.

Related System
Radius Reduction™
Radius Reduction™ provides a distinct alternative to traditional brake-formed metal panels, resulting in a crisp, origami-like metal edge on architectural applications.

Winged Refuge Sculpture at the Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, by artist John Lajba.
PHOTO © A. ZAHNER COMPANY.

Photograph of John Lajba with his Winged Refuge Sculpture Model.
PHOTO © A. ZAHNER COMPANY.

Winged Refuge Sculpture at the Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, by artist John Lajba.
PHOTO © A. ZAHNER COMPANY.

Winged Refuge Sculpture at the Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, by artist John Lajba.
PHOTO © A. ZAHNER COMPANY.

Winged Refuge Sculpture at the Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, by artist John Lajba.
PHOTO © A. ZAHNER COMPANY.

Winged Refuge Sculpture at the Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, by artist John Lajba.
PHOTO © A. ZAHNER COMPANY.

Winged Refuge Sculpture at the Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, by artist John Lajba.
PHOTO © A. ZAHNER COMPANY.