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FILE - This Dec. 2, 2014 file photo shows the exterior of the Motown Museum in Detroit. The museum is located on the site of the recording studio that Berry Gordy founded in 1959, creating the Motown hit machine that produced Diana Ross and the Supremes, The Temptations, Michael Jackson and many other superstars. The museum is filled with artifacts from original furniture to gold records, and visitors get to see the recording studio - small and simple by today's standards - where many of the hits were recorded. (AP Photo/Beth J. Harpaz, File) Image Credit: AP

There’s a little bit more dancing in the street at the Motown Museum as officials accept another donation supporting its expansion plans.

The Detroit museum says it’s received $500,000 (Dh1.83 million) from the Hudson-Webber Foundation. The donation follows September’s announcement of a $1 million gift from the Fred A and Barbara Erb Family Foundation.

The expansion — pegged at $50 million — will be designed and built around the existing museum, which includes the original studio and famed “Hitsville USA” sign.

Plans call for interactive exhibits, a performance theatre, recording studios and expanded retail and meeting spaces.

The museum is located where company founder Berry Gordy launched his music empire. The label started in 1959 and scores of stars and hits were created before Motown decamped to California in 1972.