Yes, poorly and greedily structured. I don't think that museum would have ever cost more than $10,000 a month to operate. I just can't imagine. The deal that did it in was rent that was demanded by a new for profit owner. THAT is on the city. They KNEW exactly what they were doing. There must have been some underlying antagonism between the family and the city. That's all I can think.
But on a broader note, we are seeing collectively, museums closing, never getting opened for our hobby and it kind of makes me think we should have a national automotive history museum.
Some might say we do - the AACA Museum. Never been there, but the AACA is kind of considered the "core" of the hobby from which all other clubs sprout out.
There is of course, the Peterson Museum in California and the Gilmore. The Gilmore, if it has the room - again I have never been but it is on my bucket list - should be "encouraged" to be a strong regional museum. Donate, go and visit, spend money, OR don't and watch it eventually become too costly to operate.
I prefer to drive my old cars, not look at static displays. I think this should be a "cornerstone" of any old car museum - offer up the old cars to ride in, not necessarily drive, but ride in, or drive some. If this sounds crazy it is not. I am also a Rail Fan. I have a model train layout, read railroad history, just go watch trains, - AND - take excursions.
The Illinois Railroad Museum is an interactive museum and should be a bench mark for the automotive museum. Most weeks of the year, they run trains. You can do steam, diesel, whatever, but you can ride the trains, AND IT WORKS! Nobody gets killed, injured, and everyone can experience the trains in operation.
Now imagine if you could go to the Gilmore and they fired up a 1950 Kaiser and said "OK, for $30 you can be a passenger in the car for a 10 minute ride". Or a 1936 Cord, or whatever you can imagine - they could have a schedule just like the Illinois Railway Museum so you could know what would be available to be a passenger in that week or weekend.
That would make a huge difference to young people. When we had the Buick Club's National meet in 2010 in my backyard, my daughter and I got to be passengers in an early 1920's Touring and my daughter got to experience some time in the rumble seat of one. Priceless stuff.
Just a thought "outside the box" as they say nowadays.