
Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird claps with day camp participants after announcing the opening of the Air Park Community Center and Williams Branch Library on Tuesday.
A day after kids in a summer day camp moved into a new space — the $10.5 million Air Park Community Center just east of Arnold Elementary — Honor Mazuch found herself sharing the new space with a bunch of adults and cameras and microphones.
After some of those adults made speeches lauding the community center — which replaces the longtime recreation center in the former military barracks built in 1954 as part of the Lincoln Air Force Base —the woman at the podium asked reporters if they had any questions.
They didn’t. But Honor, a third-grader participating in the summer day camp, did.
“Are you the mayor?”
Yes, was the answer, followed by a query from another of the blue T-shirt-clad summer camp observers: “Can anyone come here?”
Yes, answered Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird, arguably one of the best things about the 25,000 square feet of new space that includes a city library branch, a full-size gym, three smaller fitness rooms, meeting spaces and a multi-purpose and game room with the requisite pool, ping pong and foosball tables.
People are also reading…

The new Air Park Community Center has 25,000 square feet of space and cost $10.5 million to build.
Construction workers were still putting finishing touches on the building, installing playground equipment and finishing a park area Tuesday, but city officials got an occupancy permit Friday, and Honor and her friends took up residence Monday.
Gaylor Baird said that when she was still on the City Council she worked to make building a new Air Park center a priority and seeing it open and full of people it was intended to educate and empower was a huge victory.
The old recreation center was old and increasingly dilapidated, and city officials determined renovating it wasn’t feasible. Now that the new center is open, they’ll demolish it.
The new center was paid for with about $6.2 million in non-voter-approved bonds called certificates of participation and nearly $1.4 million raised in a capital campaign, in addition to general fund dollars, keno funds and impact fees that paid for the playground equipment.

Day Camp participants play in the gym at the new Air Park Community Center and Williams Branch Library on Tuesday.
The new center is on parkland called Huskerville Park. Lincoln Parks and Recreation Director Maggie Stuckey-Ross said the playground equipment outside will be accompanied by a picnic shelter, an artificial turf playfield and a walking trail.
The programming at the old center — the before — and after-school programs, the open senior programs, rock-steady boxing for people who suffer from Parkinson’s disease and karate classes — will move to the new center.
But the new center will allow for more programs, Stuckey-Ross said, including group fitness classes, dance classes and still-to-be designed programming in collaboration with the library.
This is the first community center co-located with a library. The Williams Branch was co-located at Arnold Elementary, but there were numerous challenges with security and hours, so officials decided to move it to the community center. It also frees up space for the increasingly crowded elementary school.

The Williams Branch Library, which used to share space with Arnold Elementary School, is now co-located with the new Air Park Community Center.
The new library includes a fenced-in outdoor space with a chalk wall for kids or adults to write on, and two meeting rooms will be shared with the community center.
Heather Keele, an architect with Clark Enersen and one of the project managers, said there is a kitchenette and transition rooms for young people with behavioral issues that need them. The artificial turf outside will be a great space for outdoor movies and everything is located one floor for easy access.
“There’s something here for everyone,” she said, and why they named it a community center instead of a recreation center.
That was what Honor liked best, that it’s a place to make new friends, where people can be kind to each other. It’s why, she said, her favorite spot so far was the “cozy corner,” furnished with bean bag chairs to sit in and chill.
“I really think it’s going to be really fun,” she said.
Download the new Lincoln Journal Star app.
Top Journal Star photos for July 2023

Hayden Coleman successfully pole vaults over the rope during the pole vault event at the Cornhusker State Games Track and Field event at Lincoln High on, Saturday, July 22, 2023, in Lincoln.

Workers cut into a water tower next to General Dynamics at 4300 Industrial Ave. on Tuesday in Lincoln.

Thomas Fernandez and his sister, Cora, play on top of a log pile while other attendees to the farm take part in a press conference on Monday at Shadow Brook Farm, where Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird and local officials announced a plan to make Lincoln’s food system more resilient.

Carpet Land's Mason Gaines dives to third base during an American Legion A-5 Area Tournament game against UBT on Sunday, July 16, 2023, at Den Hartog Field.

Nebraska's Jeff Sims signs an autograph for Elliot Christensen of Lincoln, 12, Sunday at Hawks Championship Center.

Nicole Kolbas poses for a portrait Wednesday at Woodland Hills Golf Course in Eagle. Kolbas is the 2023 Journal Star girls athlete of the year.

Penny Putney pulls back as Romeo, an alpaca from Lincoln Alpaca Picnics, as he attempts to take a green bean from her during an encounter event on Wednesday at Charles H. Gere Branch Library. Alpacas don't have teeth in the top front of their mouths, which gives them the appearance of having an underbite.

Grant Schirmer (left), who plays the role of Carl Hanratty, and Bede Fulton, who plays Frank Abagnale Jr., wait for their cue to take the stage during a dress rehearsal for "Catch Me If You Can" on Tuesday at Pinewood Bowl in Lincoln.

Speed Skaters compete in the Mens 300m race during the NSC 35 ultimate inline skating competition at Speedway Sports Complex on, Sunday, July 9, 2023, in Lincoln.

Teams compete in knee deep water at the annual Beat Breast Cancer Mud Volleyball Tournament on Saturday in Prague.

Marlina Bowdery poses for a photo with pictures of her late son Timothy Montgomery, who also went by the name Timothy Wallace, Friday in Lincoln. She started an online group for grieving mothers after his death.

Reflected in a mirror, Francis Vigan walks on a treadmill with the assistance of physical therapy assistant Wendy Kyser on Friday at Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital. Vigan, a 34-year-old bodybuilder, has been recovering after a rare spinal cord stroke during a workout paralyzed him from the waist down.

Charlie Musselwhite sings the blues out to the crowd during the ZooFest music festival outside of the Zoo Bar at 136 N 14th St. on Thursday in Lincoln.

A BNSF train cruises along the tracks past Memorial Stadium as seen from the Haymarket pedestrian bridge on Thursday, July 6, 2023, outside of Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln.

City workers cut into a large tree branch that had fallen due to the storm on July 4th in front of Bethany Christian Church on the corner of N Cotner Blvd. and Aylesworth Ave, Wednesday, July 5, 2023, in Lincoln.

Kids ride specially decorated bikes down South Sixth Street during Seward's 155th annual Fourth of July celebration on Tuesday. The city — known as Nebraska's Fourth of July City — draws thousands to its annual celebration.

Eleven-year-old Beau Taylor of Austin, Texas, tries to blow the biggest bubble at a contest during Seward's 155th annual Fourth of July celebration on Tuesday. He was the winner in the contest.

Fireworks erupt leaving sparks falling during the firework show at the annual Uncle Sam Jam, Independence Day Celebration at Oak Lake Park on, Monday, July 3, 2023, in Lincoln.

Steve Novak, lead singer for Soul Dawg performs during the annual Uncle Sam Jam, Independence Day Celebration at Oak Lake Park on, Monday, July 3, 2023, in Lincoln.

Liam Dotson (left) is lifted out of the water by Brother Paul Holmes during a Jehovah's Witnesses' baptism Saturday in a swimming pool on the floor of Pinnacle Bank Arena. After a three-year hiatus due to COVID-19, more than 5,200 members of the denomination came to Lincoln for their annual convention, which ends Sunday.

The Swiftdogs Zach St. Pierre wears the sorting hat from the Harry Potter series as he celebrates a home run against the Sioux City Explorers on Friday at Haymarket Park. The Lincoln Saltdogs became the "Swiftdogs" for one night, as tickets to a Taylor Swift concert were up for grabs to all ticketholders.

Zoo Bar owner Pete Watters, who has worked at the club since 1987, said while it became famous for blues, there was always bluegrass, country, reggae and rock ‘n’ roll.