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Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood among city sites seeking Obama library

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But if it follows the precedent set by other presidential libraries, wherever the archives are, growth likely will follow.

According to Susan Donius, director of the National Archives’ Office of Presidential Libraries, they bring jobs and can be an engine for growth.

“In many areas, you have a library reaching 200,000 to 300,000 visitors a year,” Donius said. “That means people are coming into the city and spending travel and tourism dollars.”

The Clinton library was a boon to downtown Little Rock when it opened in 2004, turning a grungy area of abandoned warehouses and defunct railroad tracks into a 28-acre library park including a massive glass and steel structure surrounded by sparkling fountains. The facility has sparked an estimated $2 billion in new projects in the area, including an office and condominium complex, a technology center, restaurants and hotels, according to city officials.

In Illinois, all one has to do is look at Springfield, home of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, to see the potential impact. Though the facility is not part of the National Archives and is run by the state, it has the highest attendance of all of the presidential libraries in the country.

Though attendance has declined in recent years at presidential libraries across the country, the Lincoln library continues to attract nearly 300,000 visitors per year, according to Executive Director Eileen Mackevich. She estimates the library’s annual economic impact at more than $24 million.

While Mayor Rahm Emanuel has not spoken publicly about the possibility of an Obama library in Chicago, it could help him reach his goal of attracting 50 million visitors to the city annually by 2020. The mayor also wants to elevate Chicago from No. 10 to among the top five most popular U.S. cities for overseas travelers.

“It wouldn’t matter where it lands. Any time we can get something new into the neighborhoods, it’s great,” said Meghan Risch, spokeswoman for the city’s tourism bureau, Choose Chicago. “If it does go forward, it would be great for the city, especially the areas south and west of downtown.”

Jerry Roper, president of the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, said geographically, Chicago is the best choice without question.

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