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AiG closes on purchase of 47 acres near Cincinnati!

by Creation Museum on May 4, 2000

AiG closes on purchase of 47 acres near Cincinnati!

After four years of zoning hurdles, a very scenic 47-acre piece of property was purchased on May 4. Located in Northern Kentucky and just west of the major Cincinnati Airport along I-275, the land will become home to a 50,000-square-foot state-of-the-art facility "The Creation Museum and Family Discovery Center." The complex will also serve as the new headquarters for AiG's 60 (and growing) staff.

In an historic moment Ken Ham (AiG
Executive Director) greets former
property owners as closing is finalized.

The future museum-which will see placement of several first-class exhibits already collected and being stored in three large warehouses (estimated worth of the exhibits: at least $7 million)--will provide visitors from around the world with a "walk-through" history of the world starting from the Bible's very first verse. The museum will also be "evolution free."

Because the accounts of the Creation and the Flood are the most-attacked portions of the entire Bible, primary focus of the museum will be on Genesis. At the same time, huge dinosaur models, well-produced videos, and interactive displays will give families a dramatic visual tour of Old Testament history, and then the message of the Cross.

Executive Director Ken Ham remarked today: "This is the beginning of a new era for creationism worldwide. Our family museum and center will be the first major creation/Biblical history museum of this size anywhere in the world. It will be a legacy for future generations who will visit and learn about the message the Lord is entrusting to us today. This major outreach will stand as an incredible witness to the world that the Bible is true from its very first verse, including its message about the Gospel of Jesus Christ."

Ham added: "there is a special blessing in our purchase today. We can pay-off the land in installments over five years – interest/usury free!"

Ken Ham observes while
Mike Zovath (AiG General
Manager) signs closing
documents.

For the past two years, AiG has had an "option to purchase" the land, contingent on rezoning becoming finalized (which became official in March).

What's next?

The $5-8 million project may see groundbreaking in March 2001, with a grand opening tentatively to be held in the summer of 2002. Because the property is located within a day's drive of about 165-million people, the impressive collections should make this a major tourist attraction in the eastern part of America (and will draw international visitors-AiG has affiliate offices in five other countries).

AiG is close to announcing the hiring of a major Cincinnati architectural firm to be the museum's lead architects. Engineers, designers, and general contractors are currently being interviewed to be a part of the final design and construction team. Already, hundreds of excited residents in the region have stepped forward to volunteer their services as electricians, plumbers, carpenters, etc.