[HealthyTribes] Funded Rural Community Design Workshop Opportunity
Gramp Heather
heather.gramp at state.or.us
Wed Jan 6 08:27:36 PST 2016
Dear Partners -
Apologies for the late notice on this announcement, but this was just shared by the CDC. I encourage you to have a look!
The Citizens' Institute on Rural Design is offering a competitive application for communities to be selected to receive a supported community visioning and design workshop - 2.5 days supported by cross-disciplinary professionals to help you take on your design, zoning and other challenges> This can be a real opportunity to design a place where "Place Matters" -- and you have a hand in making your place healthier! Please talk with your liaison if you would like to confer or brainstorm ideas.
Do you live in a rural community? Are you faced with a design challenge? See http://rural-design.org/apply Deadline January 12, 2016
* Review the Eligibility <http://rural-design.org/eligibility> requirements. The Request for Proposals<http://rural-design.org/sites/default/files/documents/final_cird_rfp_1.pdf> <http://rural-design.org/sites/default/files/documents/cird_press_release_2015_nea_final_final_edits.pdf> for 2016-2017 is out now!
* Build a team:<http://rural-design.org/resource/picking-your-partners-community-planning> talk to local leaders, citizens, and organizations about partnering with you to host a workshop.
* Questions about the process? Check the FAQ<http://rural-design.org/faq>'s and register for our pre-application assistance calls<http://rural-design.org/application-assistance>!
* Our application deadline for our 2016-2017 workshops is January 12, 2016. Apply here<http://rural-design.org/application-form>.
More info from CIRD:
Residents in America's small towns and rural communities care deeply about the future of their towns and value their uniqueness, strong sense of community, and special places. However, they increasingly face urgent challenges: How can they add jobs and support local businesses? How do they create a positive future for their kids? How can they honor and protect local character and history? How do they use limited financial, human, and natural resources wisely?
Developing locally-driven solutions to these challenges is critical to the long-term vitality of these communities, and the arts and design can play a powerful role in this process. Across the country, community leaders and residents are coming together to tackle these challenges and to find creative strategies that address:
* How to build strong economies and grow jobs;
* Where to locate new growth or redevelop older areas;
* How to design efficient transportation systems;
* How to protect the community's historic and culturally significant resources.
Rural design<http://rural-design.org/what-rural-design> is an important tool for rural communities to build upon existing assets and improve the way a community looks, its quality of life, and its economic viability. However, few rural communities have access to design assistance or the expertise to tackle these challenges on their own.
The Citizens' Institute on Rural Design(tm) (CIRD) provides communities access to the resources they need to convert their own good ideas into reality. CIRD works with communities with populations of 50,000 or less, and offers annual competitive funding to as many as four small towns or rural communities to host a two-and-a-half day community design workshop. With support from a wide range of design, planning and creative placemaking professionals, the workshops bring together local leaders from non-profits, community organizations, and government to develop actionable solutions to the community's pressing design challenges. The community receives additional support through webinars, conference calls, and web-based resources<http://rural-design.org/resources>.
Established in 1991 as Your Town: the Citizens' Institute on Rural Design(tm), CIRD has convened more than 70 workshops<http://rural-design.org/workshops> in all regions of the country, empowering residents to leverage local assets for the future in order to build better places to live, work, and play. Initially a partnership among the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), the National Trust for Historic Preservation, and the State University of New York (SUNY) at Syracuse, the program was managed by Richard Hawks and Shelley Mastran from 1991-2012.
CIRD remains one of the NEA's key design leadership initiatives<http://arts.gov/partner/design/index.html>, and is currently conducted in partnership with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Project for Public Spaces, Inc., along with the Orton Family Foundation and CommunityMatters(r) Partnership.
Heather Gramp, MPH
Policy Specialist
Public Health Division
heather.gramp at state.or.us<mailto:heather.gramp at state.or.us>
971-673-0630
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