Chicago Sun-Times

BOWING TO COMMUNITY PRESSURE, OBAMA CENTER MOVES GARAGE

- LYNN SWEET Follow Lynn Sweet on Twitter: @ lynnsweet Email: lsweet@suntimes.com

WASHINGTON— In a significan­t victory for neighborho­od and park advocacy groups, the Obama Foundation announced on Monday that a controvers­ial proposed abovegroun­d garage on the Midway Plaisance will be located under the Obama Presidenti­al Center in Jackson Park.

The foundation move to bury the garage in the complex comes as opposition to aspects of the developmen­t on historic parkland is getting more organized— and as crucial city and federal approvals are needed.

Moving the garage undergroun­d — the entry ramp will be on Stony Island near 61st— takes a festering issue off the table as others remain. The proposed closing of Cornell Drive as it winds through the park has triggered an enormous community outcry.

The next stop: The foundation has to submit the developmen­t to City Hall’s Chicago Plan Commission.

That’s coming as a federal review to discover “adverse effects” of the project is ongoing and may well prove tougher than expected because the federal players are not controlled by Mayor Rahm Emanuel, former President Barack Obama’s first chief of staff.

The Midway connects Washington and Jackson parks with the South Side system designed by the famed landscape architects Frederic Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux. They are listed on the federal National Register of Historic Places.

A foundation spokesman said in a statement, “From the beginning of the planning process, President Obama and the Foundation have consistent­ly made clear that the community is our partner in the developmen­t, design, and constructi­on of the Obama Presidenti­al Center.

“After numerous meetings with the community and other valued stakeholde­rs over the past months, the Foundation understand­s that many of those voices feel strongly that the parking for the OPC should be located within the OPC campus in Jackson Park. The Foundation has heard those voices.”

One group, “Save The Midway,” said in a statement it is “extremely pleased to learn that the historic, open, public parkland of the Midway Plaisance has been withdrawn from considerat­ion as a possible site for a parking garage for the Obama Presidenti­al Center— nor will it be transferre­d by the city to the private Obama Foundation.

“We hold this to be a victory for preservati­onists who fought to respect this Olmsted park as a national treasure on the National Register of Historic Places; for public parks and open land advocates; for environmen­talists; for community groups and organizati­ons; and for the local community.”

Margaret Schmid, the cofounder of the watchdog Jackson Park-Watch, told the Sun- Times, “We are delighted that the Obama Foundation is listening to the voices of the community.”

The background

The foundation proposed a 450- car garage on the eastern tip of the Midway— public land— in August.

But to folks who thought the foundation already had taken enough existing public parkland— some 20 acres in Jackson Park for the presidenti­al center— enough was enough.

The foundation said the abovegroun­d garage would help generate foot traffic to spark nearby economic developmen­t. But the foundation never came up with a business plan to show what they had in mind. And a proposed heavily landscaped parklike roof made no difference.

The Midway garage was announced in August with a supposed selling point that the roof would be landscaped to double as a public park. In November, the architects said there was the potential of relocating the garage.

The foundation decision also comes near the start of what may well be a tougher- than- expected federal review of changes in Jackson Park, triggered because Jackson Park and the Midway have been listed on the national register since 1972.

 ?? COURTESY THE CULTURAL LANDSCAPE FOUNDATION/ © STEVEN VANCE ?? A view of Jackson Park, looking north, with the Museum of Science and Industry at upper right.
COURTESY THE CULTURAL LANDSCAPE FOUNDATION/ © STEVEN VANCE A view of Jackson Park, looking north, with the Museum of Science and Industry at upper right.
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