Post: Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial approved

Dear Coalition Friends:

On Monday, the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial planned for the Tidal Basin near the FDR Memorial was given final approval by the National Capital Planning Commission, as reported below in The Washington Post. The Post website includes a video interview with Dr. Ed Jackson, chief architect of the Memorial.

The National Coalition to Save Our Mall enthusiastically supports construction of the Memorial and looks forward to its addition to the American story told on the National Mall. Our testimony asking NCPC to approve the Memorial but to separate out the suburban house-size (3,000 square foot) “visitor services facility” planned across the street from the Memorial was rejected by NCPC. As our readers are aware, for over a year we have stated our view that the visitor facility violates the Commemorative Works Act moratorium on visitor centers, and that the need for additional restrooms and interpretive materials could be achieved through means less intrusive on the open space and views and vistas on the National Mall.

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THE WASHINGTON POST

Start of MLK memorial’s construction all but secured

Panel approves compromise for barriers; building permit could be just days away

By Michael E. Ruane
Tuesday, October 27, 2009

The National Capital Planning Commission gave final approval Monday to a new security configuration for a memorial to Martin Luther King Jr., clearing the way for construction of the long-awaited monument.

There were tears in the audience when the capital’s federal planning agency voiced its unanimous approval at a specially arranged meeting. “Very big day,” said Trudy D. Byrd, memorial project public relations manager, as she wiped away tears. “”It’s been a long time coming.”

Ed Jackson Jr., the memorial project’s chief architect, said: “This is 12 years, personally, of my involvement. . . . The light has turned green. All we’re looking at now is that building permit from the Park Service.”

The memorial is planned for a four-acre crescent-shaped site amid the cherry blossoms on the northwest shore of the Tidal Basin. The centerpiece is to be a 2 1/2 -story granite sculpture of the slain civil rights leader. Called the Stone of Hope, it depicts King standing with his arms folded as if emerging from the stone.

At 28 feet, it will be eight feet taller than the statue of Abraham Lincoln in the memorial to the 16th president and will rest on pilings driven as far as 50 feet down to bedrock.

The project has weathered several storms. It was criticized when organizers picked a sculptor in China to execute the design. Then the original sculpture of King was assailed as too “confrontational” by the Federal Commission of Fine Arts and had to be reworked slightly. The project later stalled amid debate over how much security is needed at the site.

The National Park Service, concerned about car bombs, wanted a series of stout bollards, or security pillars, at the main entrance and elsewhere. Critics said that ran counter to King’s sense of openness.

The compromise calls for a low-walled island containing two large elm trees as the main vehicle barrier to the site’s entrance. There will be security bollards, but they will be less apparent, and the trees will frame and insulate the site from the street, officials said.

“I’m appreciative, and I look forward to the next step as we go forward,” said Harry E. Johnson Sr., president and chief executive of the memorial’s foundation.

Monday’s action came at a special commission meeting requested by the Interior Department. It “was of particularly high priority to Secretary (Ken) Salazar because of Dr. King’s legacy and the importance of the proposed memorial in his honor,” a department spokeswoman said in an e-mail. The Interior Department will oversee the site.

The sculpture of King and other parts of the memorial are being crafted in 144 blocks by Chinese master sculptor Lei Yixin. The pieces must be transported to the United States by sea, officials have said.

Peter May, an associate regional director with the Park Service, said the construction permit likely will be issued in a matter of days, after a final review of the building plans. The project also must contribute to the long-term preservation of the $120 million memorial and its site, he said. The project has raised $107 million so far.

The memorial’s anticipated completion date is late summer 2011, Jackson said Monday.

 

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