The National Association of REALTORS® is not the only source of funding for your placemaking project.  There is a broad range of philanthropic interests who are continuing to integrate placemaking efforts with innovative grant making programs.

Below is a description of each of these organizations and the programs they have designed in order to support multi-sector and community-based placemaking efforts at every scale.  All of these organizations are part of the Funders Forum, organized by the Project for Public Spaces, which is a program of the Placemaking Leadership Council.

Sustainable Flatbush Healing Garden, a project supported by ioby | Photo by Keka Marzagao.

ArtPlace America

Program: National Grants Program
Innovation: Bringing together funders to link arts and culture with community planning

ArtPlace America (ArtPlace) is a ten-year collaboration among a number of foundations, federal agencies, and financial institutions that works to position arts and culture as a core sector of comprehensive community planning and development in order to help strengthen the social, physical, and economic fabric of communities. In practice, this means having arts and culture represented alongside sectors like housing and transportation – with each sector recognized as part of any healthy community; as requiring planning and investment from its community; and as having a responsibility to contribute to its community’s overall future.

The Sprout Fund

Program: Seed Award Fund for Community Innovation
Innovation: $1,000 small grants for non-traditional ideas

The Seed Award Fund for Community Innovation offers grants to support, celebrate, and showcase the initiatives of creative people in the Pittsburgh region with the cumulative power to create a critical mass of positive change. Seed Award projects are innovative, non-traditional ideas that focus on current issues and challenges faced by the community, and inspire a diverse group of participants to be more active, involved, and civically-engaged. To promote innovation at the grassroots, Sprout is asking the community “What’s your Grand Idea? How would you use $1,000 for an innovative community project?”

The J.W. McConnell Family Foundation

Program: Cities for People
Innovation: Empowering nonprofits around Canada to explore key themes around city-building

Cities for People is a new initiative of the J.W. McConnell Family Foundation, which has grown in part from a recognition that in cities here and around the world, there is a deep yearning for change. The core proposition is that cities can be made more resilient and livable through innovation networks. By linking local efforts across the country with those taking place in other parts of the world, they want to foster a culture of continuous social innovation and deeper collaboration.

Knight Foundation

Program: Knight Cities Challenge
Innovation: “Idea” grants at all levels, block, neighborhood, and city

What is your best idea to make cities more successful? The Knight Cities Challenge seeks new ideas from innovators who will take hold of the future of our cities. Applicants simply must submit ideas for making the 26 Knight communities more vibrant places to live and work at the city, neighborhood and block levels, and all sizes in between. By simplifying the lengthy traditional funding process, Knight is making sure that everyone has an opportunity to share an idea for their city.

Southwest Airlines

Program: Heart of the Community
Innovation: Funding a movement through local projects

The Southwest Airlines Heart of the Community program was developed to support and activate public spaces in the heart of cities. Launched in April 2014, the program aims to support Placemaking – a movement that reimagines public spaces as the heart of every community. Through a multi-year partnership with PPS, Southwest Airlines is committed to leveraging the power of Placemaking to strengthen connections between people and the places they share and to spark social, economic, and environmental benefits in communities across the country.

Levitt Pavilions

Program: Levitt AMP Music Series
Innovation: Building community with performing arts

Levitt is passionate about reinvigorating America’s public spaces through creative placemaking and creating opportunities for everyone to experience the performing arts. They believe the world needs more third places, guiding their community-driven efforts. By sponsoring dozens of concerts in 16 communities around the country, they use music to create gathering spots and bring people together. Levitt Pavilions offers grants, resources and support to build and sustain signature Levitt music venues and to present the Levitt AMP series.

National Association of Realtors

Program: Placemaking Micro-Grants
Innovation: Small grants through local REALTOR® associations.

NAR’s Placemaking Initiative encourages REALTOR® associations and their members, to engage in Placemaking in their communities. The Placemaking Micro-Grant is available to REALTOR® associations to help them plan, organize, implement and maintain Lighter, Quicker, Cheaper Placemaking activities in their communities. REALTORS® are uniquely positioned to help communities build better public spaces, with their vested interest in making sure people can purchase homes in areas with a strong sense of place.

ioby

Program: Online fundraising platform
Innovation: Crowd-resourcing for community projects

ioby helps neighbors grow and implement great ideas one block at a time. Their crowd-resourcing platform connects leaders with funding and support to make our neighborhoods safer, greener, more livable and more fun. ioby believes that it should be easy to make meaningful change “in our backyards” – the positive opposite of NIMBY. ioby’s platform gives everyone the ability to organize all kinds of capital—cash, social networks, in-kind donations, volunteer time, advocacy—from within the neighborhood to make the neighborhood a better place to live.

Calgary Foundation

Program: Neighbour Grants
Innovation: Grassroots grants up to $5,000 supporting resident-led projects

Neighbour Grants is the Calgary Foundation’s original grassroots granting program, offering grants since 1999 with five cycles each year. The program has helped people do many different things, such as build a community garden at their local park, gather to celebrate the artistic talents of local youth, create a traffic-calming pavement painting in front of their school, engage their cultural community in creative ways to address community priorities, and develop a community plan to guide neighbourhood redevelopment.

The Horticultural Society of New York

Program: Neighborhood Plaza Partnership
Innovation: Working with community organizations to maintain and program neighborhood plazas

Created in 2013, NPP is a response to the opportunity and need created by the New York City Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Plaza Program. In partnership with community-based organizations, the DOT is building pedestrian plazas across the city. Once the DOT creates a plaza, the city contracts with the community-based partner to maintain and program it. NPP combines direct service with advocacy to assist those community-based organizations serving as plaza managers in high need areas.

The Cleveland Foundation

Program: Neighborhood Connections
Innovation: Small grants accompanied by community-wide knowledge sharing

Neighborhood Connections offers small grants to groups of residents in Cleveland and East Cleveland to do projects that improve the quality of life in their communities. Grants range from $500 to $5,000. Grants are intended to spur small, grassroots community projects. Grants may be used for a wide variety of activities and projects, and groups are encouraged to think in new ways about what will work in their communities and with whom they might partner. They also fund the “Neighbor Up” network, encouraging knowledge sharing amongst grant recipients and community leaders.

National Endowment for the Arts

Program: Our Town
Innovation: Grants encouraging arts organizations to engage in a placemaking process

The Our Town grant program supports creative placemaking projects that help to transform communities into lively, beautiful, and resilient places with the arts at their core. This funding supports local efforts to enhance quality of life and opportunity for existing residents, increase creative activity, and create a distinct sense of place. Our Town offers support for projects in two areas, arts engagement, cultural planning, and design projects along with projects that build knowledge about creative placemaking.

Citizens Committee for New York City

Program: Neighborhood Grants
Innovation: Small grants for low-income neighborhoods in NYC

Through Neighborhood Grants, Citizens Committee awards micro-grants of up to $3,000 to resident-led groups to work on community and school projects throughout the city. They prioritize groups based in low income neighborhoods and Title I public schools. Recent awards have enabled neighbors to come together to make healthy food available in their communities, transform empty lots into community gardens, organize tenants to advocate for better housing conditions, and start school recycling drives. The deadline for this round of grants is January 25th, 2016.

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