Baltimore, MD - Apr. 30, 2026  -  Baltimore isn't waiting around, and neither is Miriam's Library. What started as a vision is now steel, concrete, and real momentum. Construction is officially underway at Miriam's Library and Learning Center, the 14,000-square-foot educational hub at 201 Milford Mill, built in memory of Mrs. Miriam Mintz, a"h, the beloved special education teacher whose decade at the Talmudical Academy of Baltimore left an imprint on hundreds of children and families across the city.

Following the closing on the building this past Chanukah, work began almost immediately. While the full second floor, all 7,000 square feet, is being prepared for buildout as existing tenants transition out, a vacant space in the building was identified, and crews moved in right away. "Because children shouldn't have to wait," Mendel Mintz shared. The 1,400-square-foot pilot space is scheduled to open this summer.

At the heart of the pilot space is a robust afterschool program designed to give Baltimore's children a place to land when the school day ends. Somewhere to get help with homework, work through challenging material with one-on-one support, recharge, and grow. The afterschool zone is being built with that in mind: open, welcoming, and structured to meet kids where they are. Surrounding it, the plans call for digital learning areas, private study rooms, quiet reading nooks, and a reading lounge bathed in natural light, with comfortable seating and shelves filled with possibility.

For the Baltimore community, the milestone is the result of months of collective effort, and the realization of a vision first announced at Miriam's tribute event last summer, where the campaign was publicly launched. Since then, more than $2.3 million has been raised toward the project, carrying it from announcement to closing to active construction in under a year. Construction now marks the moment that vision becomes brick and mortar.

"This is only the beginning," Mintz said. "In the coming weeks, we'll be sharing real photos from inside as the space takes shape, B'ezras Hashem."