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W W W. M A I N E B I Z . B I Z 7 M A R C H 4 , 2 0 2 4 educators. The university will wel- come its first visiting Chinese Scholar, Ruifang Han, associate professor of international Chinese language education, this spring to teach courses in Chinese language and culture. The University of Maine at Augusta will expand enrollment for its nurs- ing degree programs by opening a facility in the former site of Purdue University Global, in the Marketplace at Augusta. The space will house UMA's nursing and cybersecurity training programs. The University of Maine System approved the project at a January trustees meeting. A year after a devastating fire forced a halt to production, Gifford's Ice Cream reopened its Skowhegan manufacturing plant. After the fire, it outsourced ice cream production to other makers. In early February, the first test batches of ice cream rolled off the line in Skowhegan. By the end of 2024, Gifford's hopes to have all production back in Skowhegan. QUARRYSIDE at Rock Row's is Maine's newest open-air beer garden and is situated on the edge of the 26-acre quarry on the Rock Row campus. Quarryside features catering with Lone Pine Brewing, 40 x 60 tent, yard games, kid's play area and a huge flex space for events expansion. Bring your group to Maine's newest outdoor living room in 2024. CONTACT: Reach out at Rockrowevents@waterstonepg.com to book your group or event today. quarryside.com | rockrow.com LONE PINE VODKA AND SIGNATURE COCKTAILS 12,000 SQ. FT. BEER GARDEN 299 CAPACITY WITH SEATING AVAILABLE FOR 100 25,000 SQ. FT. "FLEX SPACE" 167 FREE PARKING SPOTS ON-SITE FOOD TRUCK OR BBQ OPTIONS VIA LONE PINE BREWING PRIVATE EVENTS The cultivation of Congress Square B y W i l l i a m H a l l P ortland's arts scene was putting down roots in 1994, and many of them were planted in and around Congress Square. The Maine College of Art — today, the Maine College of Art & Design — was converting the landmark Porteous Building on Congress Street into a new campus. Artist studios were sprouting up nearby. The Children's Museum of Maine had recently moved to 142 Free St. As Biz (as Mainebiz was known then) reported in December 1994, city leaders were drawing up plans for what would soon become the Arts District. Seeding much of the downtown area's creative economy was the Portland Museum of Art. The PMA opens onto Congress Square via the Charles Shipman Payson Building, which was barely 11 years old in 1994. With the new building, Biz wrote, annual visits to the PMA had blossomed eightfold to 120,000 in 1992. In 2024, however, it looks as if Congress Square's renais- sance has begun to wilt. Many of Portland's artists have transplanted to cheaper studios, although the college is thriving. COVID and a tough economy have shuttered storefronts. The Children's Museum, which merged with the Children's Theatre of Maine in 2008, today operates in a $15 million, purpose- built center at Thompson's Point. The PMA attracted 170,000 visitors in 2019. But the numbers have been down since the start of the pandemic. The museum now wants to rejuvenate Congress Square and the city's art scene with a planned $100 million expansion. It calls for replacing the former Children's Museum building, which dates to 1830, with a new wing that would double the PMA's current space. The PMA says the expansion would grow visits by 76%, add hundreds of jobs and millions of tourism dollars, and be as revolutionary today as the Payson Building was decades ago. Critics say the plan would destroy a key element of the Congress Street Historic District, and violate the letter and spirit of the city's preservation ordinance. SP ONSORED BY P H O T O / DA D E RO T, W I K I M E D I A C O M M O N S F U N FA C T : In 1994, the Portland Museum of Art's blockbuster exhibit, "Rodin," drew over 52,000 visitors during its 14-week run, Biz reported that December. The museum had an annual budget of $1.8 million and a staff of 33. Today, the PMA has grown to a workforce of about 100. Expenses totaled $8.3 million in 2022 — or in 1994 dollars, roughly $4.3 million. Head of Balzac by Auguste Rodin, 1893−95, bronze