Work to finish installing the Jacksonville Fire Museum on the foundation at its new home at 620 E. Bay St., the future Shipyards West Park, will take until late August, according to the city.
The city Public Affairs Office said in a March 30 email there is no official date to reopen the museum, but it will be at least several months before work and repairs to the facility are complete.
Hygema House Movers Inc. completed the half-mile relocation of the early-1900s building March 27, from the former Kids Kampus at 1406 Gator Bowl Blvd.
The city relocated the historic structure to allow Jacksonville Jaguars owner Shad Khan to build his proposed $321 million Four Seasons hotel-anchored development on the 8-acre Kids Kampus site.
It cost the city $1.23 million to move the two-story, 4,800-square-foot museum and the total construction cost has so far been $1.6 million, according to permits issued by the city.
The relocation cost is a city expense in the $114 million public incentives package awarded to Khan’s development company Iguana Investments Florida LLC and approved by City Council in October 2021.
Money for the move was a line-item in the city’s 2021-22 Capital Improvement Plan, but the email says the additional building improvements will be part of the larger Shipyards West design and budget.
The city and Downtown Investment Authority started contract negotiations with Agency Landscape + Planning LLC in February to determine the scope of the park space design.
DIA CEO Lori Boyer said in a March 23 email that the city directed Agency to assume a $2.5 million per acre budget for Shipyards West construction not including the Riverwalk build which is a separate CIP project. Boyer said the design work could take at least nine months.
The museum has been closed for six years because it needs repairs, according to a report by Daily Record news partner News4Jax.com.