The nearly 3,700 square feet center in New York City is expected to open in the summer of 2024 after a groundbreaking ceremony is held on Friday, according to Pride Live, the LGBTQ advocacy group that will co-manage it with the National Parks Service.
“The opening of the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center is a remarkable moment in the history of Stonewall,” said Ann Marie Gothard, board president of Pride Live. “We honor all those who came before us, most especially the queer people fighting for equality at the Stonewall Rebellion.”
CNN has reached out to the National Park Service for comment.
The Stonewall Inn opened as a gay club in 1967 in the heart of Manhattan’s bohemian Greenwich Village neighborhood. At the time, New York was notorious for its strict enforcement of anti-gay laws that made it risky for gay people to congregate in public.
After police arrested many Stonewall patrons that morning, people protested outside the bar for weeks. Those protests are often credited as a flashpoint for LGBTQ rights in the United States.
The new visitor center will be at 51 Christopher Street, which is next to where the Stonewall Inn is currently located. That space was originally part of the Stonewall in 1969, the group says.
The center will offer in-person and virtual tours, art exhibits and will also be the home base for the monument’s National Park Service staffers.
Pride Live said the visitor center is and will be funded by donations. A number of companies including Google, AARP, Target and Amazon have provided funding, the group says.
In a statement, Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland said the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center “will serve as a place where the LGBTQ community can safely gather to celebrate and commemorate its hard-fought history.”
Later this month, hundreds are expected to march past the Stonewall National Monument during the city’s Pride celebration.