
Ed OโKeefe, CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library, speaks during a ceremony commemorating the placement of the last steel beam at the library in Medora on Aug. 14, 2024. (Michael Achterling/North Dakota Monitor)
By: Michael Achterling
MEDORA, N.D. (North Dakota Monitor) โ The Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library will produce its own heat and energy using geothermal sources.
The facility will emit zero carbon emissions, produce zero waste and serve as a catalyst for continued development in North Dakotaโs scenic western border region.
And, as of this week, itโs halfway to completion.
โThe Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library will be one of the most sustainable museums in the world upon opening,โ said Ed OโKeefe, the libraryโs CEO.
Donors, lawmakers and other dignitaries gathered Wednesday in Medora to celebrate the milestone of laying of the final steel beam into position, which marked the midpoint in the construction process.
โTheodore Roosevelt said, โBelieve you can and you are halfway there.โ Folks, we are halfway there,โ OโKeefe said during an on-site ceremony to more than 100 attendees.
The next goal for construction teams will be to beat the snow and frozen temperatures and enclose the structure by November so interior work can begin.
The library is scheduled to open to the public on July 4, 2026, to commemorate the countryโs semiquincentennial.
โItโs going to be one of the 1,000 architectural wonders you need to see before you die,โ OโKeefe said. โItโs really going to have a lot of significance for many different audiences.โ
During the event, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum said the beam placement was only the beginning of milestones for the presidential library.
โWeโre on a journey to create the best presidential library in the nation,โ Burgum said. โThereโs 14 others, but this will be the best. This will have the biggest impact on generations to come.โ
Burgum, along with first lady Kathryn Burgum and other visiting officials, signed the last steel beam before it was raised into position in what will become The Arena at the Roosevelt library, commemorating one of the 26th presidentโs famous speeches.
The governor noted another famous quote from Roosevelt, who said he would not have been president if not for his time in North Dakota.
โAll that will come here will draw inspiration from that life that Roosevelt lived, the courageous and bold life, and โฆ theyโll learn about his time that he spent here,โ Burgum said.
U.S. Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., said one his favorite parts about the library and its design is how it incorporates itself into the landscape of the Badlands and Theodore Roosevelt National Park.
โThis is so Roosevelt, right?โ Cramer said. โSo much of construction and development replaces nature with a structure. In this case, theyโve built a structure into nature and that tells the story of Theodore Roosevelt so beautifully and with such integrity.โ
Cramer, Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., and Rep. Kelly Armstrong, R-N.D., spearheaded an effort to acquire the land and federal funding for the project across three different bills in Congress. One of the bills, the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library Act, would allocate $50 million to the project through the U.S. Department of the Interior and grant access for the library to display some of Rooseveltโs personal items that are housed at various federal agencies. The legislation was introduced in April.
Cramer said heโs hopeful the bill will be added to a continuing resolution to fund the federal government and appropriated by the end of the year. If not, he joked with Hoeven during the event that they may not come home for Christmas. He also added that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is from New York, Rooseveltโs home state.
โAs long as heโs not bitter about North Dakota getting the project, he should help us preserve Theodore Rooseveltโs heritage,โ Cramer said.
The libraryโs foundation has raised $320 million of a revised $450 million fundraising goal, OโKeefe said. Fundraisers are hopeful to add the federal $50 million to that total before the end of the year.
Joe Wiegand, a Theodore Roosevelt impersonator who stars in a one-man show in Medora, said he thinks the library will appeal to multiple generations.
โThat really is the cornerstone of the Roosevelt experience,โ Wiegand said. โItโs a family experience โฆ itโs not just for guys in suits, itโs not just for historians, itโs for the families of this country and the families of the world who will come out and be inspired.โ
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