WaPo article on children’s museum

When news broke a few months ago that the National Children’s Museum was seeking to return to DC from the National Harbor as early as 2015, we were immediately curious about what its potential return would mean for the anticipated children’s museum at Art Place at Fort Totten. Reporting on the National Children’s Museum challenge in returning to DC, the Washington Post provides this nugget:

One potential problem for the museum may be competition for money and philanthropic or business partners. This spring, lawyer and former board member Jane Cafritz plans to launch a mobile educational lab to serve schools, libraries and community centers in the District. She also wants to open the Washington D.C. Children’s Museum near the Fort Totten Metro in Northeast, on property owned by the family foundation of her developer husband Calvin Cafritz. This D.C. museum, she said, “will inspire children to discover and learn through hands-on activities so they may develop and acquire the 21st-century learning skills needed to succeed as citizens, workers and leaders.” And might she collaborate with the National Children’s Museum? “I would never say no.”

The timeline the Art Place team provided in its July 2014 update to the Zoning Commission indicated the children’s museum would be part of Building B, which would be constructed in 2019 at the earliest. As the Art Place team continues to revise and refine its PUD, it seems that the team is still very much committed to keeping the children’s museum in play no matter where the National Children’s Museum eventually decides to locate.

 

 

One response

  1. I always thought that was the original plan to bring the Children’s Museum back to DC to the project at Ft Totten I never imagined that they were speaking opening an entirely separate children’s museum in that space.

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