By PAUL HAMMEL
Nebraska Examiner
LINCOLN — High inside the Rotunda of the Nebraska State Capitol is an unused gallery where you can get a bird’s eye view of the beautiful artwork in the dome and mural-lined hallways of the building.
Current and former state senators joined Thursday in touting a $3.9 million project to turn the currently vacant, fifth-floor space into a visitors center, complete with displays about state government and the historic Capitol.
Popular spot
“This could become one of the most popular viewing locations in the building, and a place of learning,” said former State Sen. Dave Pankonin of Louisville.
He joined with current Sen. Robert Clements of Elmwood in urging passage of Legislative Bill 812, proposed by Clements, which would devote $3.9 million of the state’s abundant cash reserves to renovate the space as part of the current renovations underway in the 91-year-old Capitol.
In original plans
The fifth-floor space was originally intended to be a place for public visitors by the Capitol’s architect, Bertram Goodhue, but has been unused in nearly four decades.
Clements, who chairs the Legislature’s committee that crafts the state budget, the Appropriations Committee, said an organization of former state legislators, which included Pankonin, had approached him with the idea of renovating the unused gallery.
In his original plans for the Capitol, Goodhue envisioned the fifth-floor gallery as a place where the public could get a better view of the artwork in the building — artwork that explains the history of the state and democratic government.
Clements, who is a history buff, said there’s no place in the State Capitol that explains the background of the unique skyscraper design of the building — which is a designated National Historic Landmark — or the three branches of state government: legislative, executive and judiciary.
‘Ample space’
“It’s something that we all talk to our fourth graders about,” the senator said, referring to the thousands of school children who visit the Capitol each year.
“There’s ample space,” Clements added, on the fifth floor.
The area was used periodically in the past as state offices, but not since at least 1986.
Off-limits to the public now
It has been off-limits to the public because of safety concerns — there is no railing between the marble columns that ring the Rotunda. Non-reflective glass partitions would be placed between the columns as part of a renovation plan.
Dan Worth and Mark Bacon of BVH Architecture told members of the Appropriations Committee that the space needs a lot of work. The wall paint is cracking and peeling, lead paint must be removed, windows require repair and the floor is uneven. A gently sloping floor would be required to make it handicapped accessible.
Under a plan provided by the firm, fire suppression and security systems also would be installed, as well as modern heating and air conditioning systems, which are currently the focus of a long-running renovation project at the State Capitol.
Sara Kay of the Nebraska chapter of the American Institute of Architects said the U.S. Capitol has a similar visitors center as part of its Rotunda.
“We would be absolutely thrilled to see this gallery plan happen,” Kay said.
Done as part of current restoration work
Clements said money could be saved by having the fifth floor renovated as part of the Capitol restoration and heating/air conditioning update project now underway.
The Appropriations Committee took no action on LB 812 after the public hearing Thursday, but the committee is a week away from starting to craft a state budget for the next two fiscal years.
Clements said he hopes to include some funding for the fifth floor work, in hopes that private funds might be raised to contribute to the project. Funds would not be needed until 2025, he said.
Trust fund for State Capitol
Coincidently on Thursday, the Appropriations Committee heard a proposal, inspired by the Nebraska Association of Former State Legislators, to create a trust fund for “preservation, restoration, and enhancement of the courtyards of the Capitol.”
The retired lawmakers raised $1.4 million toward the landscaping of the four courtyards at the State Capitol after decorative fountains were installed.
Former State Sen. Curt Broom said that about $900,000 of those funds remain and that parking them in a state investment fund would reduce fees and ensure that the maximum amount of the donations would be used to help the State Capitol.