Museum not getting smaller… well, maybe

With respect to the size of the museum, this has changed over time. It’s gotten bigger; it’s gotten slightly smaller as we’ve continued to look at many different options.
-Jim Vergon, Lakeview Museum Board Chairman

So, the Peoria Riverfront Museum might be bigger or it might be smaller, but for sure there will be some “minor changes” because of “rising construction costs,” according to the Journal Star. Considering I’ve never seen a project ever get bigger due to rising construction costs, I’m going to guess Vergon’s quote is code for “it’s going to be smaller, just not as small as has been rumored.” I appreciate the museum partners’ positive outlook, but do they really expect us to believe this:

Vergon said that new program is “going well,” and [Lakeview Spokeswoman Kathleen] Woith adds fundraising has nothing to do with design changes.

Really? You don’t think delays in fundraising had anything to do with construction cost estimates going up, prompting “minor changes” in the design? They’re completely unrelated?

Woith also states that the public fundraising campaign doesn’t start until next year. If the “Circle the Square” campaign is any indication, I wouldn’t get my hopes up if I were Lakeview.

Last June, Jim Ardis and seven other mayors committed to raise $16 million in a year and raise grassroots support for the museum. At that time (6/27/06), the Journal Star reported that “the museum group has raised […] about $16 million in private funds and more than $5 million in a combination of state, federal and local dollars.”

Today, almost a year later, the Journal Star says that, as of February, public dollars total “only $6 million in commitments” and “[p]rivate donations total $18 million, or a little more than half the $35 million being sought.” That means the mayors’ efforts to raise $16 million in a year has so far fallen about $14 million short of the goal.

I hope someone with the museum partners at some point is brave enough to take an honest assessment of why there’s not more excitement about this project. The stalled fundraising should be a big hint that something’s not resonating with the public, or at least that the cost and scope of the project is just too big.