Puneet Varma (Editor)

Great Platte River Road Archway Monument

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Phone
  
+1 308-237-1000

Great Platte River Road Archway Monument

Address
  
3060 E 1st St, Kearney, NE 68847, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 9AM–5PMThursday9AM–5PMFriday9AM–5PMSaturday9AM–5PMSunday12–5PMMonday9AM–5PMTuesday9AM–5PMWednesday9AM–5PM

Similar
  
Nebraska Firefighters Museum, Museum of Nebraska Art, The Archway, Trails & Rails Museum, Yanney Park

Profiles

Great platte river road archway monument


The Archway (also known as The Great Platte River Road Archway or Kearney Arch) is a museum of and monument to Nebraska's and the Platte River valley's role in westward expansion. The Archway is directly over Interstate 80 three miles (5 km) east of Kearney, Nebraska.

Contents

About

The Archway spans more than 300 feet over Interstate 80 east of Kearney, Nebraska and weighs nearly 1,500 tons. The Archway takes visitors along the trails, rails, highways and superhighways in a self-guided audio tour that includes stories of the travelers along the way. The show starts in the 1840s with the Mormon Trail, Oregon Trail and California Trail that converged at the nearby Fort Kearny before heading west. As visitors progress through the exhibit, the displays of different time periods feature a buffalo stampede, the Mormon Handcart Expedition, gold seekers, the Pony Express, the telegraph, the transcontinental railroad, the Lincoln Highway, a drive-in movie and a 1950s cafe. A new exit (Exit 275) immediately east of The Archway provides easy access. Exit 272 (to Kearney) also provides access to The Archway.

History

A monument and tourist attraction highlighting the Platte River valley was a goal of former Governor Frank B. Morrison. In 1997, $60 million in bonds were issued and purchased by investors. On 16 July 2000, the Archway opened to the public, with 223,013 and 249,174 visitors in the attraction's first two years, respectively. First-year visitors included then-president Bill Clinton. These numbers were far short of projections. The monument had to reduce expenses and refinance its bond payments in 2002, reducing the amount owed to $22 million, repaid by 2013.

While a shift in focus on educational and group tours briefly presented the monument with a more stable financial footing, attendance subsequently dwindled, counting only 49,960 visitors in 2012. The Archway filed for bankruptcy protection on March 7, 2013. In September 2013, U.S. federal bankruptcy judge Thomas Saladino approved a debt plan, ordering museum organizers to pay $100,000 as a settlement for more than $20 million it owed to bondholders, creditors and vendors. Wells Fargo Bank of Minneapolis was the trustee for the bondholders.

As part of the resolution of the bankruptcy filing, The Archway is managed by the City of Kearney. A second I-80 interchange was completed in August 2013 directly east of the museum at a cost of about $20 million, and is expected to boost attendance. Previously, eastbound motorists who missed the exit two miles west of the museum needed to travel 12 additional miles to get to the Archway. The lack of such an exit had been long blamed for part of the Archway's troubles.

In December 2013, the museum announced a two-month closure to re-brand itself following its debt ruling, scheduling its grand re-opening for March 1, 2014.

The Archway re-opened on March 1, 2014. Changes include a revamped gift shop, a new theater showing a short video detailing the building of the structure and its placement over the interstate. Also, a new mascot, Archie the Buffalo, was introduced.

  • The Archway Monument was one of the locations used in the filming of About Schmidt (2002), starring Jack Nicholson.
  • References

    Great Platte River Road Archway Monument Wikipedia