FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 11, 2007
Contact: Adam Bickelman, MassDevelopment, 617-330-2086; or
Gregory Liakos,
Massachusetts Cultural Council, 617-727-3668 x343
STATE TO INVEST $16.7 MILLION IN CULTURAL
FACILITIES
New Program Leverages Support for Creative
Economy Infrastructure in Massachusetts
List
of statewide Cultural Facilities Fund grant celebrations.
Sixty-two organizations across Massachusetts
will receive grants ranging from $675,000 to $3,938 from the state’s
new Cultural
Facilities Fund (CFF). The grants, totaling $16.7 million, were
announced today by MassDevelopment and the Massachusetts Cultural
Council (MCC), which administer the program jointly. Of the amount
awarded, $16.2 million will support 45 capital projects; and $478,688
will be used by 17 groups for feasibility and planning studies.
CFF grants will support Massachusetts non-profit cultural organizations
with building projects that increase tourism, create new jobs, leverage
private funding and expand arts and cultural activities in communities
across the state. The projects chosen for funding total $665 million
in capital investment.
"Cultural organizations are central to our identity in the Commonwealth,"
said MassDevelopment President/CEO and CFF Advisory Committee Chair
Robert L. Culver. "They attract visitors to Massachusetts and stimulate
tourism, a major economic engine for Massachusetts. They need to
be maintained and improved to meet contemporary and future needs.
Investing in them supports a vital industry sector: the creative
economy."
Recipients are located in 35 communities statewide from Provincetown
to Boston to North Adams; and run the gamut from small neighborhood-based
cultural groups to large, world-renowned museums, science centers,
and theaters. Provincetown's Fine Arts Work Center will draw on
a $205,000 allotment to reconstruct an historic building to support
emerging artists and writers.
In Boston, the Museum of African American History will use $420,000
to restore the building's exterior, increase handicap access, and
undertake other building repairs. In North Adams, the Massachusetts
Museum of Contemporary Art (MassMOCA) will use a $429,000 grant
to renovate a 27,000-square-foot former mill building and create
a new gallery. And the Zeiterion Theatre in New Bedford, which has
provided free and low-cost art programs and featured diverse music,
theatre, dance and educational opportunities for grades K-12, will
use $22,500 for a facility needs assessment and feasibility study
for expanding into a new building.
"Over the last 300 years, the people of Massachusetts have created
a unique resource in our unrivalled array of arts, science, and
heritage institutions," said MCC Executive Director and CFF Advisory
Committee member Anita Walker. "They are national treasures, and
we have a responsibility to maintain and improve them for the benefit
of future generations. These grants are a down payment on our future."
MassDevelopment and the Massachusetts Cultural Council, co-administer
the program. MCC, which solicited and evaluated CFF applications,
received 201 requests for funding totaling $80 million. MCC recruited
28 experts from across the U.S. with experience in tourism, facilities
finance, real estate project management, construction, facilities
operations, organizational development, grant making and historic
renovation and preservation to review and rank the applications
using a weighted set of criteria. All applications were also reviewed
by an appointed Cultural Facilities Fund Advisory Committee with
statewide representation. The board of MassDevelopment approved
the awards, which MassDevelopment manages and disburses. Award decisions
were based on the recipients’ ranking and annual operating budget.
Maximum awards were capped at $675,000. Grants announced today must
be matched one-to-one by the awardee with funds from private sources.
The Legislature created the Cultural Facilities Fund in July,
2006 appropriating an initial $13 million as part of an omnibus
economic stimulus bill. The FY 2008 state budget provided an additional
$5 million.
Grant Awards by
Region
CENTRAL
Capital Grants:
Worcester Center for Performing Arts, Worcester $675,000
Worcester County Horticultural Society, Boylston $675,000
Feasibility & Technical Assistance Grants:
Fruitlands Museums, Inc., Harvard $37,500
GREATER BOSTON
Capital Grants:
Arts Boston, Inc., Boston $180,000
Boston Symphony Orchestra, Boston $675,000
The Children's Museum, Boston $675,000
Emerson College, Boston $675,000
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston $274,000
The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston $675,000
Museum of African American History, Boston $420,000
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston $675,000
Museum of Science, Boston $675,000
New England Aquarium, Boston $455,000
New England Conservatory of Music, Boston $357,000
Feasibility & Technical Assistance Grants:
Dorchester Community Center for Visual Art, Dorchester $3,938
Dorchester Historical Society, Dorchester $9,375
Lesley University, Cambridge $37,500
Massachusetts College of Art Foundation, Boston $18,750
Old North Church, Boston $37,500
Paul Revere House, Boston $37,500
Riverside Theatre Works, Hyde Park $37,500
Suzuki School of Newton, Inc., Auburndale $18,750
METRO WEST
Capital Grants:
Concord Museum, Concord $98,000
DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, Lincoln $477,000
Massachusetts Audubon Society, Inc. (Drumlin Farm), Lincoln $184,000
Feasibility & Technical Assistance Grants:
The Discovery Museums, Acton $37,500
The Walden Woods Project, Lincoln $31,875
NORTHEAST
Capital Grants:
Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center, Gloucester $95,000
Lowell Parks and Conservation Trust, Lowell $21,000
City of Lowell $564,000
Lynn Museum, Lynn $283,000
The Trustees of Reservations, Beverly $200,000
SOUTHEAST
Capital Grants:
Attleboro Arts Museum, Attleboro $39,000
Thornton W. Burgess Society, East Sandwich $39,000
Town of Falmouth, Falmouth $173,000
Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Provincetown $205,000
Heritage Museums & Gardens, Sandwich $288,000
New Bedford Whaling Museum, New Bedford $617,000
Pilgrim Hall Museum, Plymouth $339,000
Plimoth Plantation, Inc., Plymouth $177,000
Plymouth Guild for the Arts, Inc., Plymouth $370,000
Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill, Truro $83,000
Feasibility & Technical Assistance Grants:
Fuller Craft Museum, Brockton $30,000
Zeiterion Theatre, Inc., New Bedford $22,500
WESTERN
Capital Grants:
Amherst Cinema Arts Center, Amherst $675,000
Berkshire Athenaeum, Pittsfield $84,000
The Berkshire Museum, Pittsfield $670,000
Sterling & Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown $353,000
Double Edge Theatre, Ashfield $67,000
Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival, Inc., Becket $104,000
The Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center, Great Barrington $147,000
Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, North Adams $429,000
The National Yiddish Book Center, Amherst $352,000
The Norman Rockwell Museum, Stockbridge $22,000
Shakespeare & Company, Lenox $395,000
Springfield Museums, Springfield $675,000
City of Springfield, Springfield $478,000
Wistariahurst Museum, Holyoke $414,000
Feasibility & Technical Assistance Grants:
Available Potential Enterprises, Ltd., Northampton $18,750
The Emily Dickinson Museum, Amherst $28,500
Hancock Shaker Village, Inc., Pittsfield $37,500
Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival, Inc., Becket $33,750
The Massachusetts Cultural Council is a state agency that promotes
excellence, access, education and diversity in the arts, humanities,
and sciences, to improve the quality of life for Massachusetts residents
and contribute to the state’s economic vitality. MCC is committed
to building a central place for arts and culture in the everyday
lives of communities through a combination of grants, services,
and advocacy for cultural organizations, schools, and artists. MCC
receives an annual appropriation from the state Legislature and
funds from the National Endowment for the Arts and other sources.
MassDevelopment, the state’s finance and development authority,
works with businesses, financial institutions and local officials
to stimulate economic growth across the Commonwealth. Between FY
2004 and FY 2006, MassDevelopment financed or managed 589 projects
statewide representing an investment of more than $4 billion in
the Massachusetts economy. These projects are supporting the creation
of 5,505 housing units and more than 23,000 jobs: 12,381 permanent
and 10,679 construction-related.
-30-