Sure. And, I should have been a little more clear when I said, "no books." The Obama museum is going to be different. In fat, it won't be a library at all. None of his papers and letters, and whatnot will be on site. It's going to be a "virtual" library. All of the documents are going to be digitized, with the hard copies remaining in the possession of the National Archives.
Why it's no longer a presidential library. Former President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, decided against a traditional presidential library run and staffed by the federal National Archives & Records Administration. One reason: They wanted the museum director to be employed by the foundation, not the federal government.
The Obama Foundation will pay for Obama's papers and records to be digitized, a process expected to be finished in time for the center's 2021 opening. The National Archives & Records Administration, which owns presidential records, will store the physical papers and artifacts in one of its facilities and make those records accessible to the public. As for the chances that Obama's papers could end up years later in Hawaii or at Columbia University, the foundation says that will not happen.
The foundation sees the project as a chance to rethink the presidential library, an opportunity that presents itself only once every four to eight years. "With digitization and the era we're living in, this will become the new model," Simas says. He adds that the Obama Presidential Center will offer the same experience as the more traditional presidential libraries. "If you go to any other presidential library, people are going to the museum," not the records rooms.
Crain's Chicago Business
And, no, unlike something like the NYPL or the LOC, you wouldn't expect a traditional reading room.
And, maybe, over time, Chicagoans and critics will come to love the design of the building and grounds, but, so far, the consensus is pretty negative.