After nearly a decade of planning, the Thomas Jefferson Visitor Center and Smith Education Center had its Grand Opening on April 15, 2009. The new center serves as the 21st-century gateway to Jefferson’s timeless Monticello, with multiple components that transform the visitor experience by preparing guests for their trips to the historic mountaintop through dynamic content presenting fresh perspectives on Monticello and the enduring significance of Jefferson’s life and ideas.
The new center gives visitors of all ages distinctive opportunities to become well-acquainted with Jefferson and Monticello at their own pace and on their own terms. Emphasizing the power of place and the strength of ideas, these all-new features highlight Jefferson’s accomplishments, his beliefs about liberty and their global relevance today, the wider community of people – both enslaved and free – who lived on the plantation, and the remarkable house and landscapes of Monticello. Curators and historians on the Monticello staff developed the content of the interpretive and educational elements.
Located on the lower slope of Monticello mountain, the center comprises five pavilions around a central courtyard. The three-level, 42,000-square-foot complex follows the contour of its hillside setting and blends into the wooded landscape with natural building materials, two “green” roofs, and other environmentally sensitive elements.
The center’s visitor amenities include a café with indoor and outdoor seating, a spacious gift shop, and an indoor ticket and information counter.
The largest capital project and the most ambitious educational initiative in the 86-year history of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, the new center features:
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