 
In a news release, the Barack Obama Foundation announced early Tuesday
 that the library would be erected on park land that was proposed for 
the site by the University of Chicago. The site was selected over bids 
made by Columbia University in New York, the University of Hawaii and 
the University of Illinois at Chicago.
"With
 a library and a foundation on the South Side of Chicago, not only will 
we be able to encourage and affect change locally, but what we can also 
do is to attract the world to Chicago." Obama said in a video 
accompanying the release. "All the strands of my life came together and I
 really became a man when I moved to Chicago. That's where I was able to
 apply that early idealism to try to work in communities in public 
service. That's where I met my wife. That's where my children were 
born."
The
 decision was hardly a surprise. The University of Chicago's bid was 
long considered a front-runner, and people with direct knowledge of the 
decision told The Associated Press and other media nearly two weeks ago 
that it was the winner.
Both
 the president and first lady once worked at the university, and they 
still maintain a house near campus. Obama taught constitutional law and 
worked as a community organizer on the South Side. First lady Michelle 
Obama is a Chicago native and worked as an administrator at the 
University of Chicago Medical Center.
"Every
 value, every memory, every important relationship to me exists in 
Chicago. I consider myself a South Sider," Michelle Obama said.
In
 recent weeks, city officials were forced to take extra steps to 
reassure foundation officials after they expressed concerns the city had
 not secured public park land that would be used as part of the 
University of Chicago bid. The City Council passed an ordinance to allow
 transfer of the land, and state lawmakers passed a bill reinforcing the
 city's right to use the park land for the Obama library as well as Star
 Wars creator George Lucas' proposed lakefront museum.
"Over
 the past months, the city has come together to bring the library to its
 rightful place in Chicago," Mayor Rahm Emanuel said in the release. The
 foundation said it will open offices on Chicago's South Side by the end
 of the year.
One
 remaining question is how the foundation will select between two 
properties near campus, Washington Park or Jackson Park, both of which 
are potential sites under the university plan.
Foundation
 Chairman Marty Nesbitt, a friend of Obama, and Emanuel are scheduled to
 appear at a news conference about the library on Tuesday afternoon.
The
 news release said the University of Chicago's "has pledged to make 
resources and infrastructure available to the foundation in the near 
term for its planning and development work."
Meanwhile,
 the foundation said it plans to collaborate with each of the other 
three finalists. It will pursue a long-term presence at Columbia 
University, work with the state of Hawaii to establish a presence in 
Honolulu and will also collaborate with the University of 
Illinois-Chicago.
 
 
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