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Levine Museum Details Plans to Sell Uptown Home A Part of Many Changes
by Hannah Erin Lang | Guest Contributor
T
he Levine Museum of the New South is selling its building on 7th Street in uptown Charlotte as it looks to transform itself and how it interacts with the community. In an email sent to museum members, Levine President and CEO Kathryn Hill said the museum will search for a âmore flexible uptown facilityâ and pursue a âcommunity-centered, digital-first transformation.â âAs part of our calling to reach new audiences and deliver non-traditional programming, we have decided to sell our Uptown property to fully embrace our next chapter,â she wrote in the email. No immediate changes are planned, however, and the museum will continue to operate while the property is on the market. âOur mission remains unchanged, and our role in this community is more important than itâs ever been,â Hill said in an interview with the Observer. âWhat weâre looking at now are new ways of delivering that are broadly accessible and highly compelling.â âBy digital-first, we donât mean digitalonly,â she added, âThere is nothing that re-
The Levine Museum of the New South said it is searching for a âmore flexible uptown facilityâas it moves to sell its building. (Photo Credit: The Charlotte Observer) places the power thatâs generated in a room full of people who are sharing their stories and learning from each other, and in-person programming is still part of our strategy.â Hill said selling the site could take up to a year. The sale also opens up a significant piece of uptown real estate. Pandemic-related closures spurred the museum to embrace new types of projects, such as a digital walking tour of
the Brooklyn neighborhood launching this August, Hill told the Observer. âIt has forever changed us,â she said. âThe museumâs mission has never been more important, and if we are to reach broadly across the community, we must imagine new ways to create and deliver content in the digital age,â Hill said in the email, âWe recognize, too, that we need to work more closely with and in the commu-
nities we serve, to ensure all Charlotteans are heard and known.â The museum has received a threeyear, $600,000 grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation to support the shift. The funds will go toward expanding the Brooklyn tour initiative and hiring a community engagement manager, among other items, Hill said. Last August, Hill said that the museum was exploring a potential sale or redevelopment of its uptown property, which comprises 0.7 acres at the corner of 7th St. and North College St. At the time, Hill said the board has been studying options for he site for several years. The museumâs current facility opened in 2001, although the organization had a presence in the building for several years before that. The building and land it sits on are worth about $7.7 million, according to county real estate records cited by the Observer last year. The Levine Museum was founded in 1991, according to their website. : : This story originally appeared on The Charlotte Observer, charlotteobserver.com.
July 9-22, 2021
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