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Museum Campus: Lakefront Jewel
Chicago's Museum Campus Opening
Created by the $110 million relocation of Lake Shore Drive, Chicago's
new Museum Campus opened in June 1998 with a goal
to be recognized as one of the most innovative, cultural playground
in the country. Called "one of the most significant additions to
the Chicago lakefront in generations," by Chicago's mayor, the Campus
is Chicago Park District land that connects three Chicago cultural
institutions: Adler Planetarium, Field Museum and John G. Shedd
Aquarium.
Public introduction of the Museum Campus public included a dedication
June 7 by Mayor Richard Daley; a celebration Gala June 12; and an
official opening the weekend of June 26-28. It was not until mid-March
that two-person Museum Campus staff realized it would need public
relations support if the opening event were going to generate public
interest and excitement about the Campus. On March 31 Public Communications
Inc. submitted a communications plan proposal to help introduce
the new campus and create name recognition for this new lakefront
attraction. The proposal was accepted the next week and the program
began in full force.
Time became the largest obstacle in the program. In order for
media to have information about the Campus before the opening, finalized
media materials were needed in less than two weeks. The finalization
process required even more time since materials required review
and approval by the three cultural institutions and the park district
as well as Museum Campus staff. By April 20, the initial media materials
were mailed to 400 media outlets and aggressive follow-up call to
media began.
As the public relations program unfolded, several challenges emerged:
- In less than two months, make the Museum Campus which
is simply a 10-acre open space linking three cultural institutions
a must-visit Chicago destination for residents and tourists.
- Work not only with Museum Campus staff, but with representatives
from the Chicago Park District and each of the three collaborating
cultural institutions to publicize the Campus opening giving each
partner equal credit for their contributions.
- Educate the public to the benefits of using the campus trolley
system to help ease traffic and parking pressures on the area.
- Work within a limited budget of $34,700 fees and less than $15,000
expenses since the project was over budget and the program had
no designated budget earmarked for public relations support.
The
extensive media campaign succeeded in attracting the attention of
regional and national media, including the New York Times. The program
was built around themes including the historic partnership between
the three museums, the Park District and the City; the user-friendly
transportation system; the evolution of the lakefront from the time
city planner Daniel Burnham envisioned an open lakefront used by
the public.
The public relations program included:
- Extensive collateral materials, including Museum Campus media
kit materials, news releases, schedules, promotional materials,
Museum Campus Gala media kit materials, public service announcements.
- Media relations included local, regional and selected national
media relations and coordinating editorial board meetings at Chicago's
daily newspapers with Campus officials. Before the meetings, PCI
conducted spokesperson training for the Museums Campus executive
director and prepared message points for the project.
- Communications support to public the Campus trolley system which
receive $4.5 million in federal transformation funds. The trolleys
are important since they encourage the public to use public transformation
and avoid traffic and parking congestion.
- A Museum Campus information line for the public to use when
seeking information about Campus activities and regarding public
transportation options.
Positive local, regional and national media coverage of the Museum
Campus opening quickly established the Campus' name identity and
generated public interest and enthusiasm for this new lakefront
attraction. By July 20, the public relations program secured 131
media placements reaching an estimated 28.6 million audience. Coverage
highlights included two New York Time placements, a front-page travel
feature story on July 12 and a travel column piece on May 31; full-page
feature stories published in the Chicago Sun-Times, Chicago Tribune,
Daily Herald and Daily Southtown; glowing editorials in the Chicago
Sun-Times and the Chicago Tribune; coverage in national media including
Sacramento Bee, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, St. Paul Pioneer Press
and Town & Country; and television segments on NBC5 For Kids,
WLS-TV and WMAQ-TV.
The three cultural institutions connected by the Museum Campus
directly benefitted from the Campus opening Attendance at all three
museums increased over the previous year (Adler up 2.74%, Field
Museum 9.66% and Shedd Aquarium 10.10 percent) while attendance
at other Chicago cultural institutions declined. In all, an estimated
5 million people visited the Campus as it was welcomed by the city
and all who visited.
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