The transfer represents one more step in a protracted and contentious effort to bring the Barnes' art collection from suburban Lower Merion to the city's "museum mile" that stretches from Logan Square to the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The collection, valued at as much as $35 billion, is now housed in a building constructed by Albert Barnes specifically to display the collection, not as a museum, but as an educational venue.

Prior to his death, Barnes hobbled the foundation with numerous covenants that limited access, visitor fees and the ability to raise funds. They also forbid rearrangement of the works as well as any relocation. The covenants combined with mismanagement by an earlier foundation board put the foundation on the brink of bankruptcy.

In 2002, the locally based Pew Charitable Trusts and the Lenfest and Annenberg foundations pledged to raise $150 million to construct a $100-million new museum here and provide a $50-million endowment to maintain it.

Following a series of court battles, in 2004 the Montgomery County Orphan's Court, which has jurisdiction over nonprofits, lifted some of the covenants, paving the way for relocation of the collection. The court stipulated that the works, which include 180 Renoirs, 69 Cezannes, 60 Matisses, 44 Picassos, and others by Van Gogh, Degas, Manet, Monet and more, be arranged as they are in the Lower Merion building. In 2006, Gov. Ed Rendell threw his support behind the relocation by providing Mayor Street with $25 million from the Redevelopment Capital Assistance Fund, earmarked specifically for construction of the new museum.

Today, following Street's property transfer, a Barnes Foundation spokesman tells GlobeSt.com that an architect for the project "will be chosen within the next few weeks." Regarding a timeline, he says, "demolition will begin when the children are relocated, and the city has until May 2008 to vacate the building. The construction timeline will be set, once the architect is named."

Yet, some hurdles remain. In late August, Friends of the Barnes, a group opposing the move, filed a petition asking the judge to reverse the 2004 decision, arguing that it was based on faulty financial information. Lower Merion residents are also engaged in legal efforts to keep the Barnes where it is.

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