The
Zion National Park Foundation


Let
the Fundraising Begin
By Lyman Hafen, Executive Director
The newly formed Zion National Park Foundation is ready to embark
on its first fundraising project. At the August 11, 2007 Zion Natural
History Association board meeting, the Foundation Committee presented
a proposal to raise funds for the rehabilitation of the historic
Grotto Museum structure in Zion National Park. The project had been
presented by Superintendent Jock Whitworth as a high park priority,
and as a worthy undertaking for the Foundation. The board voted
unanimously to support the proposal and plans are underway to begin
raising money with a goal of completing the project in time for
rededication of the structure during the Zion National Park Centennial
celebration on July 31, 2009.
Funds raised will be used to repair and rehabilitate the stone building
at the Grotto, midway up Zion Canyon, which was built in 1924 and
was used as the park’s first museum. The handsome structure,
which is currently in disrepair, will be used for Zion’s proposed
Artist in Residence program for up to three months per year, and
as volunteer and research housing for the remainder of the year.
The project, based on the Foundation’s commitment to raise
matching funds, has been selected as one of 200 projects nationally
that are eligible for National Park Service Centennial Initiative
funding. The money raised by the Zion National Park Foundation will
be matched by money from the Centennial Initiative if that initiative
is passed by Congress.
ZNHA’s
Foundation Committee Chairman David Clove said the Foundation is
very excited to begin this new era of fundraising and especially
pleased to start out on such an important project. “We will
begin to contact friends of Zion National Park across the country
and around the world and invite them to contribute to the rehabilitation
of this beautiful and historic building,” he said. “We
believe the members of ZNHA will be among the most gracious donors
to this project.”
Superintendent Whitworth said the Grotto Museum was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1987, and is the oldest
structure still in use in the park. “It’s an excellent
example of ‘NPS Rustic’ style architecture, which dominated
park construction design throughout the 1920's and 1930's,”
he said. “The intent of this style was to design buildings
that would not intrude upon the natural scenic beauty and would
blend with the specific terrain by using materials similar to the
surrounding landscape.”
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