SALT LAKE CITY -- A project to demolish and replace parts of the condemned visitor center at Dinosaur National Monument has gone out to bid.
The project is getting more than $13 million in federal stimulus funds.
The Quarry Visitor Center, which houses the nation's premier quarry of Jurassic-period dinosaur bones, was shuttered more than three years ago because of safety problems. Its closure frustrated paleontologists who have been unable to access its 1,500 dinosaur bones.
Bids for a large-scale rehabilitation went out earlier this month. It's expected to be finished in 2011.
Park officials have also decided to temporarily relocate the visitor center at a former gift shop just outside the park's Utah entrance.
The 3,500-square-foot building -- which still has a distinctive green dinosaur out front -- will include replicas of a juvenile allosaurus and a sauropod as well as some fossils, according to Carla Beasley, the monument's chief of interpretation.
Most of the other items in the closed visitor center will be placed in storage until the rehabilitation is complete.
Crews will spend the winter remodeling for old gift shop and preparing for its opening next spring.
Meanwhile, dinosaur enthusiasts will watch for progress on the Quarry Visitor Center, about 20 miles east of Vernal.
The center was built in 1957-58 to shelter an exposed cliff face full of dinosaur bones discovered by a Carnegie Museum researcher in 1909





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