Barack Obama unveils design of Presidential library in Chicago
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CHICAGO: Barack Obama on Wednesday unveiled the vision for his presidential library in Chicago, a modern, $500 million project he hopes will be a training ground for future leaders housed in the city that launched his career.
Speaking on the city's south side near the center's future site, the former President Obama revealed drawings and a 3-D rendering of a three-structure complex with a public plaza and surrounding park land near the shores of Lake Michigan.
The site is slated to be upwards of 225,000 square feet in size and house a library, museum and forum -- as well as classrooms, meeting spaces, a community garden and a recreational area.
The goal was to "create an institution that will train the next generation of leadership," Obama told a packed audience.
"So that they can take up the torch and lead the process of change in the future."
Private donations will fund the institution and construction could take four years, though Obama said programming could begin as soon as this year.
To jumpstart that effort the former president announced he and his wife had donated $2 million to a Chicago summer jobs program with the aim of revitalizing communities that will neighbor his center's campus. (APP)