![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjTP4evFgWF3U1UnD8rEpzrvSranVuO6pLVfawHmBiO9FLmuPMeA3PPWSSXITFK7_zGV2PGMjnq_KyE1xXQsVVZQZMue7t3W8ANYxk0lBNdWXNq45V20_9FA5av-zO628iGTwmdq7kvm3Y/s320/Clinton-Library-2-cr-Cary-Tyson_mr-300.jpg)
Opened in November 2004 with Silver Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification under the United States Green Building Council LEED for New Construction program, the Polshek Partnership-designed building later earned Platinum Certification under LEED-EB (LEED for Existing Buildings) in 2007. This puts it in the forefront of a trend that another favorite institution of mine, the Grand Rapids Art Museum, has bolstered: http://www.artmuseumgr.org/home/page/Video%3A+GRAM%27s+Green+Design
Not without political and aesthetic controversy--which is somehow fitting--the Clinton Presidential Center and Park has transformed Little Rock into a tourist destination. Polshek Partnership (now Ennead Architecture: see http://www.ennead.com/#/projects/clinton-presidential-center for wonderful photos) designed the building as a cantilevered structure that strives toward the proximate Arkansas River in a gesture that embodies the President's goal of "building a bridge to the 21st Century." The views in every direction are stunning, and the Great Hall--generously rentable for community events, including the Arkansas Symphony's chamber music series--has become one of the city's signature spaces.
The permanent exhibits in the library, which Ralph Appelbaum Associates designed (more good photos: http://www.raany.com/html/proj_04/portProj_Clinton.html) are an engaging combination of artifact, reproduction (e.g. the Oval Office replica) and interactives. In recent years the Center has brought in a variety of changing exhibitions, from motorcycles to Peter Max to art by Islamic women, with artistic quality sometimes taking a back seat to novelty and relevance to the "post-presidential agenda." In this way, however, it fills a role as kunsthalle that already established institutions such as the Historic Arkansas Museum (http://www.historicarkansas.org/) and the Arkansas Arts Center (http://www.arkarts.com/) cannot and should not attempt to fill.
The building was dedicated in a pouring rain on November 11, 2004. I will always remember sitting in that miserable deluge, entertained by Bono and The Edge (playing a piano that was later refurbished and donated to the Arkansas Arts Center, where I worked at the time--still grateful) and seeing all the surviving U.S. Presidents cheerfully sitting with rain pouring down their collars, enjoying the rare if bone-chilling moment when politics is set aside and history begins.