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Homeless since its creation in 1984, the Museum for African Art will finally have a permanent home in a new $80 million building designed by Robert A. M. Stern, on Fifth Avenue between 109th and 110th Street. The structure will have 90,000 square feet, including 16,000 square feet of exhibition space and 115 luxury condominiums with views of adjacent Central Park. The condos are being built by a partnership between the museum and two developers, Brickman and Sidney Fetner Associates. In addition to arranging for the sale of the site to the museum the New York City Economic Development Corporation has pledged $12 million to the project. It will be first new construction of a museum on Museum Mile since the Guggenheim opened in 1959. While the museum doesn’t actually own any art, it promises it will pick some up before the opening of the $80 million structure in 2009.

Construction preparation has sparked a series of protests over the loss of a community garden on the site. Opponents of the plan argue that the city has essentially given away one of the most valuable pieces of real estate in New York City to the developers for building luxury condominiums outside of the competitive bidding process and without proper community, environmental or legal oversight. They argue that the project is "deceptively described" as a Museum of African Art because the museum has no collections and will house a few small rooms for lectures. Protesters have promised to file an injunction to stop construction.

Governor Proposes $12M State Funding for Museum of African Art

Governor Eliot Spitzer pledged $12 million at the groundbreaking ceremony for the permanent home of the Museum of African Art. The governor's funding pledge matches the $12 million that the city contributed. Expected to open in late 2009, the museum will feature over 85,000-square feet of exhibition space in addition to condominium housing units above the facility.

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Museum Finds Home; Community Loses Garden

While the Museum of African History has found a permanent home, members of the community garden which it will replace feel ousted. The Nueva Esperanza Jardin in East Harlem was scheduled to become the new home of the museum and Edison schools back in 2002, but plans were dropped after the school ran into financial troubles. The new plan will include a 116-unit condominium tower as well as the museum. According to activist group More Gardens!, the fate of the garden is a forewarning of what could occur across the city with dozens of community gardens in danger of being developed, particularly in East Harlem.

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Community Gardeners Fight Museum

Activists climbed into trees and tried to block construction workers from demolishing an East Harlem community garden. The police eventually got them out of the trees and the construction workers proceeded to bulldoze the site in preparation for the construction of Museum of African Art. The protesters, who had been living in another nearby garden for about a month, pledged to continue their fight by living in a multi-colored bus parked across the street.

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