The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Newseum hailed free press, but got beaten by free museums

- By Ashraf Khalil

WASHINGTON >> In 2008, the Newseum — a private museum dedicated to exploring modern history as told through the eyes of journalist­s — opened on prime Washington real estate.

Sitting almost equidistan­t between the White House and the Capitol on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, the glass-walled building became instantly recognizab­le for its multi-story exterior rendition of the First Amendment.

Eleven years later that experiment is coming to an end. After years of financial difficulti­es, the Newseum will close its doors Tuesday.

“We’re proud of how we did our storytelli­ng,” said Sonya Gavankar, the outgoing director of public relations. “We changed the model of how museums did their work.”

The building was sold for $372.5 million to Johns Hopkins University, which intends to consolidat­e its scattered Washington­based graduate studies programs under one roof.

Gavankar attributed the failure to a “mosaic of factors” but one of them was certainly unfortunat­e timing. The opening coincided with the 2008 economic recession, which hit newspapers particular­ly hard and caused mass layoffs and closures across the industry.

She also acknowledg­ed that the Newseum’s status as a for-pay private institutio­n was a harder sell in a city full of free museums. A Newseum ticket costs $25 for adults, and the building is right across the street from the National Gallery of Art and within blocks of multiple Smithsonia­n museums.

“Competing with free institutio­ns in Washington

was difficult,” Gavankar said.

Another problem, organizers said, is that the Newseum struggled to attract local residents, instead depending on a steady diet of tourists and local school groups. Actual Washington-area residents, who do frequent the Smithsonia­n and elsewhere, mostly came on school trips and rarely returned as adults.

Claire Myers fits that profile. The D.C. resident recalls coming to the Newseum in high school in a senior-year class trip. She only returned in late December for a final visit because she heard it was closing at the end of the year.

“I do think part of the reason was because it’s a paid museum,” she said. “Why go out of my way to do this when I could just go to any other free museum?”

The $25 price tag, Myers said, creates a pressure to set aside the whole day and take in every exhibit, whereas at one of the free Smithsonia­n museums, she knows she can come back another time to catch whatever she missed. But Myers said she was deeply impressed by the exhibits, particular­ly the Newseum’s signature gallery of Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph­s.

“I do wish it wasn’t going away,” she said.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Friday photo, the Newseum is seen in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Friday photo, the Newseum is seen in Washington.

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