Medicine Hat News

Work begins on massive Eisenhower memorial

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WASHINGTON After years of public controvers­y and debate, work is finally beginning Thursday on a massive memorial to President Dwight Eisenhower.

A groundbrea­king ceremony will mark the start of the project, which has been plagued for years by a bitter running fight over the memorial’s design and esthetics.

Famed architect Frank Gehry, who designed the iconic Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles and the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, was commission­ed to design the memorial. However Gehry’s original plan was strongly opposed by three of Eisenhower’s grandchild­ren and the organizing commission was hit by multiple resignatio­ns.

Gehry’s vision would transform a four-acre space on Independen­ce Avenue directly in front of the Lyndon B. Johnson Department of Education Building.

Plans call for a series of columns and multiple statues depicting the 34th president and World War II military commander at various stages of his life and career. An enormous woven metal tapestry will depict the French beach at Normandy, where Eisenhower’s troops launched the D-Day invasion. Eisenhower, who was elected president in 1952 and served two terms, died in 1969.

Gehry’s original plans called for multiple metal tapestries and a heavier emphasis on Eisenhower’s childhood in Abilene, Kansas.

At one point, Gehry threatened to take his name off the project if too many alteration­s were made. Eventually, after Gehry made his own changes to the proposal, the Eisenhower family announced their support last year, enabling the project to go forward.

Despite the approval of the Eisenhower family, strong criticism of Gehry’s vision remains. A group called the National Civic Art Society remains deeply opposed, saying the Gehry design is out of step with the tone of Washington and its monuments.

The conservati­ve magazine the National Review has also been a vocal critic; a September article in the magazine called Gehry’s design “a repellent monstrosit­y.”

Organizers still hope to have the memorial ready by June 2019, the month that includes the 75th anniversar­y of D-Day. The project is estimated to cost up to $150 million, the majority of that from federal funding.

When the memorial is completed, Eisenhower will join an elite club. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Delano Roosevelt have prominent memorials in the nation’s capital.

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