On June 19, as communities across the nation commemorate Juneteenth, the long-awaited Obama Presidential Center will open its doors on Chicago’s South Side, creating a new institution dedicated not only to preserving history but to inspiring future generations to shape it.
The opening places one of the nationโs most significant cultural projects alongside the holiday that marks the end of slavery in the United States, connecting two defining chapters of the Black American experience.

The $850 million campus in Jackson Park is dedicated to preserving the legacy of President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama while encouraging visitors to engage in public service, community leadership, and civic participation. The 19-acre site includes a museum, athletic facilities, an auditorium, a branch of the Chicago Public Library, walking trails, gardens, a playground, public art installations, and gathering spaces designed for community use.
โItโs deeply personal for me. I grew up on the south side of Chicago. I rode my bike through Jackson Park as a child, so this is a part of my childhood,โ Valerie Jarrett, president and CEO of the Obama Foundation, told The Informerโs Brenda Siler.
Jarrett said the center represents a significant investment in the neighborhood where the first Black president began his rise in public life and where the former first ladyย spent her childhood.
The Obama Foundation has said that the center was designed to be more than a traditional presidential library. In addition to exhibits documenting the lives and careers of the Obamas, the campus includes spaces intended for education, recreation, cultural programming, and community engagement.
Jarrett described the project as โfar more than just a Presidential museum,โ noting the athletic center, auditorium, public library, walking trails, vegetable garden, playground, womenโs park, and 28 commissioned works of art, 26 of which will be available to the public at no charge.
For many observers, the Juneteenth opening adds another celebratory layer.
โThereโs something profoundly fitting about opening the Obama Presidential Center on Juneteenth,โ said Dr. Angela Freeman.โOne date reminds us that freedom delayed is freedom denied. The other tells the story of what can happen when people who were once denied opportunity, refuse to surrender possibility.โ
A District-based historian and retired professor, Freeman said the center is more than โsimply a monument to a presidency.โ
โItโs a marker on a very long road that runs from emancipation to representation, from surviving history to helping shape it,โ she told The Informer.
Marcus Whitfield, a technology consulting executive from Prince Georgeโs County, Maryland, said the centerโs importance reaches beyond politics.
โWhen I look at the Obama Presidential Center, I donโt just see President Obama. I see investment in a Black community, investment in ideas, and investment in the next generation,โ Whitfield said. โThe fact that it opens on Juneteenth sends a powerful message. Freedom isnโt only about looking back at what was overcome. Itโs about creating spaces where young people can imagine what comes next. Thatโs what makes this different from a traditional museum. Itโs a place built around possibility.โ
An Educational Moment and Legacy
The centerโs library branch is scheduled to open with special programming and resources tied to the Obamasโ lives and public service.
Visitors also will have access to exhibitions, educational programming, and public spaces intended to encourage dialogue and civic participation.
For educators, the symbolism of opening the center on Juneteenth is especially powerful.
โEvery year on Juneteenth, we teach our students about a people who kept faith in freedom even when freedom was withheld from them,โ said Danielle Brooks-Reed, a Baltimore-based schoolteacher. โNow, on that same day, children will be able to walk through a campus dedicated to the first Black president and see themselves reflected in history in a way previous generations never could. For educators, thatโs priceless. Representation matters, but inspiration matters even more.โ
Jarrett said she believes young people will see themselves in the center and in the stories it tells.
โSo, the pride I have, with anticipating the looks on the faces, particularly of our young people as they walk through the doors and feel a sense of ownership with pride and enthusiasm, but hopefully motivation to feel the sense of empowerment for what each and every person can do differently in their own lives,โ Jarrett said.
She added that the centerโs purpose is focused on what comes next.
โWe use the stories about their paths; we speak upon whose shoulders the Obamas stand as a teaching instrument to motivate for the future,โ Jarrett shared. โHis fundamental belief is that ordinary people who work together โ the common set of values, with differences, can do extraordinary things. It is a living, breathing campus. It is not about the past; it is about the future.โย

