Large Capital Improvement Grants for Arts and Culture supports arts and cultural nonprofits across the state that are undertaking impactful, large-scale capital improvements.
Donor Name: New York State Council on the Arts
State: New York
County: All Counties
Type of Grant: Grant
Deadline: 01/14/2025
Size of the Grant: More than $1 million
Grant Duration: 3 years
Details:
Arts and cultural organizations offer programming that provides benefits to their communities and makes a substantial contribution to the New York State economy. The capacity of these organizations to maintain their facilities and make strategic capital improvements is central to their ability to deliver on their missions, contribute economic benefit to their local areas, and provide their communities with vital arts programming in a safe and accessible environment. Through its Large Capital Improvement Grants for Arts and Culture, NYSCA makes strategic investments in those facilities to:
- Attract visitors to the state and ensure that New York State’s residents and visitors have access to art and cultural experiences.
- Sustain and grow the arts’ role as a critical sector of New York’s economy.
- Advance the arts sector’s commitment to environmental sustainability, health and safety.
- Provide capital investments that contribute to local community development efforts and maintain New York’s globally recognized role as a creative engine.
Program Priorities
Applicants must demonstrate how the project will support program priorities, including, but not limited to, any of the following goals:
- Accessibility. Make improvements that meet or exceed accessibility standards to create an inclusive environment for artists and participants of all abilities.
- Artistry. Enable arts and cultural programming that is more creatively compelling for artists and audiences alike.
- Cultural Development. Provide further access to cultural offerings in rural areas or communities that have historically been underserved.
- Diversity. Supports improvements at organizations that prioritize diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility throughout leadership, staff, governance, audience, and programming.
- Environmental Sustainability. Demonstrate environmental stewardship and/or sustainable building practices, improve energy efficiency and mitigate the negative effects of climate change on the organization’s ability to operate.
- Health and Safety. Address known health and safety deficiencies and adhere to new public health guidelines and requirements.
- Organizational Health. Make capital investments that reduce operating costs and/or provide new opportunities for revenue generation that will improve the health of the organization.
- Structural and Historical Improvements. Address issues of building stabilization and historic preservation.
Funding Information
Grants will range from $2 million to $10 million for projects that have a total cost of $4 million or more.
Grant Period
July 1, 2025 – June 30, 2028 (3 years, extensions of up to 2 years considered).
Eligible Improvements
Eligible capital improvements including new construction, renovations and/or expansions of publicly accessible space(s) used primarily for arts and cultural programming that will improve access to arts and advance local community development efforts.
Eligibility Criteria
- Applicants must be a nonprofit organization with a primary mission to support arts and culture, either incorporated in or registered to do business in New York State, with a location in New York State, and recognized as tax-exempt under the Internal Revenue Code section as a 501(c)(3).
- Arts organizations that operate autonomously but are embedded in private universities or other non-arts 501(c)(3) organizations located in New York State may contact NYSCA to determine whether they are eligible.
- Organizations that have an LLC designation are not eligible to apply to NYSCA either directly or through a fiscal sponsor. This includes Limited Liability Company (LLC), Limited Liability Partnership (LLP), and business corporation designations.
For more information, visit NYSCA.