Obama's 'obscene monument to his ego' dramatically backfires as $850M vanity project sparks outrage
By Dan Kennedy
Daily Mail
Aug 18, 2025

Obama's project includes a tall stone-clad museum with faceted sides and
cutaway corners, sat beside a lower forum and opposite a library. They
would create a U-shape around a central plaza facing onto South Stony
Island Avenue.
President
Barack Obama's promise to build and revitalize blighted neighborhoods was a centerpiece of his first term in the
White House.
But
now, nearly nine years after he left the Oval Office, he might be
destroying one critical area in the city he called home, the Daily Mail
can reveal.
His $850 million presidential center in
Chicago -
due to open in April - has come under fire from residents, community
leaders and even onetime supporters who now warn that the massive
19.3-acre facility in Jackson Park is gentrifying the neighborhood,
increasing rent and forcing families out.
Alderwoman
Jeanette Taylor, who represents much of the area where the center is
being built, told the Daily Mail she is a fan of Obama and believes in
the project but has fought aspects of it to protect her constituents.
Her efforts have had mixed results.
'We're going to see rents go higher and we're going to see families displaced,' she told the Daily Mail.
'Every time large development comes to communities, they displace the very people they say they want to improve it for,' the
Democrat added.
'This
was no different, and we're living what is actually happening. The city
of Chicago should have done a Community Benefits Agreement before the
first shovel went into the ground, but they didn't.'
A
CBA is a legally binding document that outlines what a developer will
provide for a project such as affordable housing, local hiring and
environmental protections.
Barack
Obama's legacy project in Chicago has been beset with issues since the
start such as ballooning costs and construction delays
The
Obama Presidential Center will be located in Jackson Park, in the heart
of the South Side of Chicago, an area that has been long plagued with
crime and poverty
Chicago
residents and onetime supporters of Obama, including activist Ken
Woodard (pictured) say the former president's $850 million initiative is
doing more harm to the community than good
'We're
going to see small landlords having to raise the rent,' warned Taylor.
'Their property taxes are going up and we're going to see development
that is not inclusive to our community.'
Allison
Davis of Aquinnah Investment Trust, who has close ties with Obama,
plans to build a 26-story, 250-room luxury hotel just down the street
from the center.
And
Taylor said '$300,000 and $400,000 homes that nobody can afford' are
already popping up around the area on Chicago's poverty-stricken South
Side.
Taylor is not the only critic.
'It
looks like this big piece of rock that just landed here out of nowhere
in what used to be a really nice landscape of trees and flowers,' Ken
Woodard, 39, an attorney and father of six who grew up in the area told
Daily Mail. 'It's a monstrosity.
'It's
over budget, it's taking way too long to finish and it's going to drive
up prices and bring headaches and problems for everyone who lives here.
'It feels like a washing away of the neighborhood and culture that used to be here.'
President Obama and former first lady Michelle were seen breaking ground during the dedication ceremony in 2021
Some
locals have gone as far to dub the massive development a 'monstrosity'
that they say has 'washed away' the neighborhood and its culture
Obama
supporter and alderwoman Jeanette Taylor, who represents much of the
area where the center is being built, told the Daily Mail that the
project will likely drive up rent prices and push families out
Tyrone
Muhammad, a South Side native, director of Ex-Cons for Community and
Social Change and a 2026 Illinois Senate candidate, was among the first
to raise the alarm about the project back in 2020.
'To me it's truly the Tower of Babel,' Muhammad said.
'There's
a lot of babbling going on with the Obama Center that never seems to
get to anywhere. It's disconnected from the community it says it wants
to serve. There's this ongoing battle around it that involves policies
that never serve or effect change for the community.'
Muhammad
called it 'disingenuous' and 'hypocritical' to take park space away
from people and then not involve them in what takes its place.
The move 'violates common decency', he said.
Kyana
Butler, 30, who lives in the area, is a member of the Southside
Together group, one of at least three major activist groups that has
lobbied for better protections for the area from the Obama Foundation.
'It's pretty huge and monstrous,' Butler told the Daily Mail.
'It could have been smaller in scale and cost a lot less money. We're all worried about the impact on the community.
The
development is intended to serve as a lively community hub and uplift
its low-income Black population, but locals fear it will inevitably
displace the very people it's meant to support
The
massive 19-acre campus (pictured under construction on August 14) will
feature a fruit and vegetable garden, athletic programs, an events
facility, a museum and a new branch of the Chicago Public Library
A
rendering of The Obama Presidential Center. The facility won't open
until April 2026 after its original opening date of 2021 was pushed back
several times, with the cost ballooning from $350 million to $830
million
'Rents are going up fast. A two-bedroom apartment that used to rent for $800 a month has already jumped to $1,800.
'Property taxes are going up so much that the owner of my building is saying she might just walk away.
'I
don't blame President Obama for all of this, but the people on his team
may not have the best intentions for people in this area.'
The
Obama Foundation, which is bankrolling the project with big donations
from billionaires including Jeff Bezos, Oprah Winfrey and George Soros,
says the center will be a 'welcoming, vibrant campus where people from
across the street or from around the globe can come to get inspired and
find common ground'.
But that hasn't stopped it becoming a punchline on social media.
It
has been dubbed a 'concrete tomb', 'a totalitarian command center
dropped straight out of 1984', 'a monument to megalomania' and 'a giant
trash can'.
The
center, which will include the enormous 225-foot tall museum tower
along with community and athletic facilities, gardens and event spaces
and a branch of the Chicago Public Library, is not a typical
presidential library.
Instead of original documents from Obama's two terms, it will house digitized versions.
The
Daily Mail spent much of last week at the site where construction
workers were seen on the job - but they seemed to have a lot more work
to do
Some
locals have criticized developers for taking away their park (pictured
in 2020 before construction) without any input from the community on the
plans for the new development in its place
An aerial view from August 14 shows ongoing construction where the athletic field once was
And
unlike the libraries of of presidents going back to Herbert Hoover,
which are non-partisan National Archives, this is the first to be
completely privately funded.
It was originally slated to open in 2021, was pushed back to 2024 and is now set to open in April 2026.
Workers on the center blame policies and lengthy DEI sessions for the delay.
'It was all very woke from the time they broke ground in 2021,' a construction foreman on the site told the Daily Mail.
'Every
so often a bunch of staffers from the Obama Foundation wearing little
badges would come by the site and they'd ask us silly questions like,
are you white, straight, gay, trans, whatever. It was ridiculous.'
The
foreman, who is white, said he and the rest of the crew had to sit
through three, 90-minute DEI workshops during his 18-month stint.
'They
talked about the oppressors and the oppressed and how we are supposed
to help people of color and ask them how they feel,' he said.
Obama
Foundation officials say the center will open April 26, much of the
site on Chicago's South Side looks very much still under construction
Tyrone
Muhammad (pictured), a South Side native, director of Ex-Cons for
Community and Social Change and a 2026 Illinois Senate candidate, was
among the first to raise the alarm about the project back in 2020
'They
told weird stories. I remember something about a reverend and two apple
trees, and one guy had a short ladder and one had a tall ladder.
'I think it was supposed to show us that some people aren't born with a silver spoon in their mouths.
'I don't know. We just kinda tuned out.'
'[Obama]
said, "I only want DEI. I only want woke". He wants woke people to
build it,' Trump said in May during a meeting with Canadian Prime
Minister Mark Carney.
'Well, he got woke people and they have massive cost overruns. The job is stopped.'
That claim proved false. The work actually has not stopped.
Daily
Mail spent much of last week at the site, and workers were very much on
the job - but they seemed to have a lot more to do.
The
Obama Foundation is bankrolling the project with big donations from
billionaires including Jeff Bezos, Oprah Winfrey and George Soros
The
Georgian-style home where Barack and Michelle Obama lived for 20 years
in Hyde Park, an upper-middle class area of Chicago's South Side
Steve
Cortes, a longtime Chicagoan and former adviser to President Trump who
recently made a documentary titled 'You Don't Know Barack: Exposing
Obama,' has called the Obama Center 'absurd'.
'It's way behind schedule and on track to cost upwards of a billion dollars,' Cortes said.
'Some cost overruns are normal, but not when it winds up being three times what it was supposed to cost.
'I'd
argue that part of the problem has been the insistence on minority
contractors or women. Look at the Reagan Library. It's beautiful.
'This?
There are almost no windows. What are they hiding? And this Brutalist
cement look in a city known for its incredible architecture. Why?
'This is a monument to one man's ego. You know Obama had to approve it.'
Demonstrators
with the Community Benefits Agreement Coalition have been seen rallying
in favor of affordable housing protection for the surrounding
communities in the past
The foreman, who spoke under condition of anonymity, noted one other strange feature of the building.
'The place is built like a bomb shelter,' he said.
'The
walls are a foot and a half thick. Some of the shafts are three feet
thick. Walls have a blast rating and the windows - what few there are -
and the doors have blast rating.
'I've been doing this for 37 years and this is the first time I worked on a building that had a blast rating.'
A
spokeswoman for the Obama Center did not respond to the Daily Mail's
questions about cost overruns and other criticisms by activists.
Instead, she emailed a general statement:
'Sitting
on nearly 20 acres in Jackson Park, the Obama Presidential Center will
be a tremendous global destination and public community asset, with a
playground, restaurant, branch of the Chicago Public Library, fruit and
vegetable garden and sledding hill to name a few elements,' the
statement read.
'We
are proud that members of the community played key roles in building
the center, and we are looking forward to hiring local residents for
hundreds of good jobs when the Center opens.'
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