Monday 16 July 2012

WORLD FOOD

Welcome to the Hall of Laureates

Welcome

The internationally renowned World Food Prize Foundation invites you to explore the new Hall of Laureates through this website, and to visit us when we open permanently in Spring 2012. Please use the tabs on the left of the screen to:


- Explore the newly renovated Hall of Laureates in a room-by-room tour. Click on each room for more information about its art and design, functionality and significance to the World Food Prize.

- Learn more about the World Food Prize's efforts to preserve the historical integrity of the former Des Moines Public Library, while also renovating the building for a green, sustainable future.

- Visit us in person or reserve the building for special events. Under this tab, you will find contact information and other details.



View the official Hall of Laureates video

About the Building

As a special tribute to Nobel Peace Prize winner and World Food Prize founder Dr. Norman Borlaug, and to provide an enduring foundation for all of the programs he created, the World Food Prize Foundation took on a $29.8 million capital project to restore the century-old Des Moines Public Library Building as the Dr. Norman E. Borlaug World Food Prize Hall of Laureates.

Open to the public starting in Spring 2012, the Hall of Laureates will serve as:
a world-class museum to recognize great achievements in agriculture and fighting hunger;
a convocation center at which to hold events during the World Food Prize International Symposium -- the
Borlaug Dialogue;
a home for the expanding Global Youth Institute, which aims to inspire the next generation of leaders;
an educational facility featuring interactive displays on hunger and food security;
and a conference center and event space available to other groups and organizations for their meetings and
other activities.
This magnificently restored Beaux Arts space celebrates the spirit of giving, emphasizing the importance of global food security. Dr. Borlaug is honored for his role as the Father of the Green Revolution and the man who has saved more than one billion lives with his innovations in agriculture. The building also pays tribute to the World Food Prize Laureates and Iowa’s agricultural and humanitarian pioneers for their significant contributions to the global fight against hunger and helping to feed the world and improve the lives of others.

Thanks to the vision of the State Legislature of Iowa, the support of the Polk County Board of Supervisors, the cooperation of the City of Des Moines, and the generosity of our sponsors, we have preserved and restored one of Iowa’s grand, historic buildings – the old Des Moines Public Library Building – so it may serve as the home of the World Food Prize, as well as a monument honoring those who have made efforts toward alleviating world hunger.

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