Jamaica Music Museum to Get New State-of-the-Art Home as Culture Minister Breaks Ground on Facility

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Jamaica’s rich musical legacy is about to gain a fitting home. The Institute of Jamaica’s (IOJ) Jamaica Music Museum (JaMM) is set to move into a new, state-of-the-art facility, with groundbreaking recently taking place at the corner of East and Tower Streets in downtown Kingston. Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport, Olivia “Babsy” Grange, hailed the project as a milestone moment, calling the forthcoming building “a living, monumental edifice that will reflect the past, the present, and the future.”

The JaMM, which has outgrown its previous spaces on Water Lane and Tower Street, will now gain a permanent home designed to expand its offerings and create a vibrant hub for Jamaica’s cultural expressions. Grange emphasised that the new venue will be more than a repository of artifacts, promising it will “resonate with pulsating performances and Jamaican cultural expressions,” anchoring the island’s legacy while inspiring future generations.

Director and Curator Herbie Miller, who has been at the forefront of advocacy for over 15 years, underscored the significance of this long-awaited development. “Our music has given Jamaica the status of a global cultural mecca,” he said, stressing that a dedicated museum is “not a luxury, but a necessity.” His comments highlighted the urgent need for a world-class institution that preserves, celebrates, and interprets the island’s unrivalled musical achievements.

No photo description available.Murals outside of the JaMM

The occasion also saw the official opening of two major exhibitions: From African to Jamaican: Music and Creolised Black Culture at JaMM, and a new permanent exhibition gallery at the Natural History Museum of Jamaica. Grange described the JaMM’s display as a vivid narrative of Jamaica’s Afro-diasporic journey, “weaving art, music and history to create a clear story of who we are and how far we have come.” Meanwhile, the Natural History Museum’s gallery is designed to inspire young people through an exploration of Jamaica’s unique biodiversity and environmental heritage.

For IOJ Executive Director Michelle Creed-Nelson, these initiatives symbolise a renewed commitment to national heritage. “I am proud to steward these milestones as we diversify and deepen our offerings,” she said, noting that the developments reaffirm the IOJ’s mission of making culture and history accessible to every Jamaican. Together, the groundbreaking and new exhibitions mark not just a physical transformation of spaces, but a cultural renaissance in how Jamaica preserves and presents its story to the world.

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