Communities – Page 27 – Knight Foundation

Mecklenburg County, Knight Foundation kick off funding for $135 million initiative to improve lives and strengthen community through libraries

Image: Rendering of new Main Library design. Design Architect: Snøhetta; Architect of Record: Clark Nexsen; Rendering: LMNB Copyright: Snøhetta

Charlotte, NC – November 7, 2019 – The Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Foundation today unveiled the design of a new, technology-forward main library as it launched The CommonSpark, a $135 million public-private partnership to ignite change within the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library system.

Mecklenburg County committed $65 million to the project, and the Library Foundation invites all who believe in the power of libraries to join the comprehensive campaign. The John S. and James L. Foundation invested $10 million to help make the Main Library a model for the 21st century, an inviting public space for all Charlotte residents, equipped with the latest digital technology.

“The Library is so important to the community because it provides access to opportunity, to education, to learning that people wouldn’t get anywhere else,” said Dena Diorio, Mecklenburg County Manager. “I’m most excited about the vision for this 21st century library.”

The CommonSpark campaign and the design of the new Main Library were revealed at the Library Foundation’s annual Verse & Vino fundraising event on November 7, 2019 at the Charlotte Convention Center. The new facility is slated to open in 2024 on the site of the current Main Library at 310 North Tryon Street in uptown Charlotte. 

“Time and time again our Library Foundation is a difference-maker, raising support for the Library, broadening awareness of its activities and contributions, and growing its friends, fans and partners,” said Library CEO Lee Keesler. “The private funds the Foundation is raising to complement public funds from Mecklenburg County will transform an architecturally distinctive, state-of-the-art, technologically advanced new main library from good to great.”

“Informed and engaged communities are vital to healthy democracy, and libraries vital to informed and engaged communities,” said Alberto Ibargüen, Knight Foundation president. “The new Charlotte Mecklenburg Library will be open, inviting, and focused on digital – it will meet people where they are and be relevant to their lives.”

Since 2002, Knight Foundation has invested $1.5 million in the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library, including $250,000 in the process of envisioning the 21st century urban library, a critical early step in the planning for the new Main Library.

Together with support from Mecklenburg County, today’s announcement from Knight Foundation brings the CommonSpark campaign to 67 percent of the overall project goal. 

COMMUNITY-DRIVEN CAMPAIGN

The CommonSpark campaign addresses an integrated set of needs:

  • New Main Library: a tech-forward civic destination and gateway to reimagined North Tyron Street corridor 
  • Support Services Center: to maximize public space in the new Main Library, many behind-the-scenes functions will move offsite
  • Technology, Innovation and Programming: throughout the Library’s 20 locations
  • Endowment for the Future: funds generate a permanent source of revenue for evolving needs
  • Annual Library Operating Support

The CommonSpark campaign committee consists of more than 60 civic leaders, led by volunteer co-chairs Charles Bowman, Market President at Bank of America; Rob Harrington, Partner at Robinson Bradshaw; and Holly Welch Stubbing, Executive Vice President and In-house Counsel at Foundation For The Carolinas.

Campaign co-chair Charles Bowman says, “This campaign is building toward a vision for our city. My dream is that we become the most literate city in America. That would be a defining moment. We talk about our brand and we have so much here in Charlotte – but what if you could say to people ‘I live in the most educated, literate city in America.’”

The project is directly aligned with community priorities and opening doors to opportunity. The CommonSpark campaign co-chair Holly Welch Stubbing explains, “This project appeals to the philanthropic community because it includes an amazing set of opportunities to connect to career pathways, post-secondary success, entrepreneurship, writing and creative thinking, civic engagement, connection to our history…you can find your giving strategy in this building.”

The Library Foundation anticipates engagement in the campaign and individual investment at every level, from all parts of the community. Co-chair Rob Harrington observes, “The Library is not just a public building, it’s the community’s building. Everyone has an opportunity to participate in this campaign and help make our Library all it can be.”

More information can be found at www.foundation.cmlibrary.org along with news, a project overview and frequently asked questions. Questions about the CommonSpark campaign and how to make a gift should be directed to Karen Beach, CFRE, Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Foundation Deputy Director at 704-416-0802 or [email protected].

About Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Foundation

The Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Foundation exists to help the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library improve lives and build a stronger community. Created as a non-profit 501(c)(3) in September 2012 in partnership with Foundation For The Carolinas and Charlotte Mecklenburg Library, the Foundation supports Library services, expands the Library’s collection of print and digital materials, enhances programming for all ages, invests in innovative initiatives and strives to grow its endowment for future generations. For more, visit foundation.cmlibrary.org

About the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation

Knight Foundation is a national foundation with strong local roots. We invest in journalism, in the arts, and in the success of cities where brothers John S. and James L. Knight once published newspapers. Our goal is to foster informed and engaged communities, which we believe are essential for a healthy democracy. For more, visit kf.org

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Media Contacts:

Melanie Baron
Marketing & Communications Specialist
Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Foundation
(704) 416-0804
Email: [email protected]

Lauren Dickinson
Communications Officer
The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation
305-908-2694
Email: [email protected] 

Image: Rendering of new Main Library design. Design Architect: Snøhetta; Architect of Record: Clark Nexsen; Rendering: LMNB Copyright: Snøhetta

Today, Knight Foundation announced a $10 million investment in a new library for downtown Charlotte—the first private contribution in a $135 million campaign to create a state-of-the-art public space that can serve not just as a repository for books, but as a true commons for all the city’s residents. 

At Knight, we have long recognized the power of libraries to support more informed and engaged communities. Libraries are not just sleepy citadels of knowledge. They are vibrant spaces where we come together to access information, share experiences and collaborate to build a stronger community. The best libraries are a commons, a meeting place of equals that we own and share together.

Charlotte is about to take a bold leap in challenging our ambition for just what a library can do. The reimagined New Main Library, set to open in 2024, will evolve from a traditional temple to books into an iconic and inspiring space that becomes a true 21st century public commons. It will be a tech-forward gathering place and civic destination for Charlotteans to come together, connect and engage in the life of the city. It will provide a best-in-class technology infrastructure that improves the experience for patrons and residents and creates new ways to engage with the community.

“The best libraries are a commons, a meeting place of equals that we own and share together.”

The new library will expand the spectrum of services for visitors, moving them beyond just access to information, to the opportunity to participate and shape civic discourse. The design of the building and technology will blend seamlessly to improve the patron and resident experience, providing tools like digitally streamlined social services, a community media lab, mobile access to information and engaging audiovisuals. Patrons will participate in self-guided and collaborative learning and workspaces that connects people from different backgrounds to the information they need. 

In the words of Knight President Alberto Ibargüen, “The library is modern. It is open. It is inviting. And it is focused on digital. That’s the way of the future. And that’s where we want to be.”

The $10 million investment is Knight’s largest commitment to date in Charlotte. And it’s a fitting one, coming at a key time for the city.

Charlotte is soaring, bringing in new people, ideas, investment and prosperity. It is also a challenged city, struggling with intensifying economic stratification and inconsistent opportunity. 

In this vital time, the New Main Library can serve as a forum for Charlotteans to chart a course towards a prosperous and equitable city. With technology at the forefront, this project will play a transformational role in the development of our city, while serving as a model for libraries of the future.

On a personal note, as a native Charlottean, the library has played an important role throughout my life – from studying and checking out music to starting a business and taking my kids to the library. I’m thrilled it will evolve to remain a transformative institution for generations to come.

Charles Thomas is Knight’s director in Charlotte. You can follow him on Twitter at @cthomasclt.

To support a community planning process and overall plan for the 5 Points/Streetcar Corridor of Historic West End.

To build a street-view augmented reality platform for engaging residents in conversations around the history, present and future of a particular neighborhood.

To preserve Jack Knight’s former home in West Akron as the new headquarters for the Summit County Land Bank.

Public spaces are essential in any community because they provide the space for residents to gather, play, learn, dream and connect. Knight invests in public spaces and the public life of cities to foster engagement and attachment to place. We believe great public spaces don’t just happen—they require creative leadership and engaged neighbors to plan, design, program and operate. This was a key topic of discussion at the inaugural Knight Public Spaces Forum held in Philadelphia this summer. 

Forum attendees—275 in all—came from across North America to share their experiences and learn from peers. These artists, planners and designers, librarians, neighborhood champions, local government leaders, recreation and parks representatives, and technologists represent the expanding and inclusive field of practice that is driving public spaces today. Through community workshops, sessions and informal discussions, participants spent two days exploring how they can engage others to advance the role of public spaces in fostering more informed and engaged communities.

<p><em>Sabina Ali, Chair, Thorncliffe Park Women’s Committee, at Knight Public Spaces Forum 2019 </em></p>
Sabina Ali, Chair, Thorncliffe Park Women’s Committee, at Knight Public Spaces Forum 2019 

The forum also provided a platform for Knight to expand its commitment to public space leadership. During the program kick-off, seven proven, innovative public space leaders were named Knight Public Space Fellows. Each fellow received $150,000 in flexible funding that will provide them with the space and freedom to unleash their creativity. They will also have access to opportunities to work with and learn from each other and to elevate their work to a wider audience. We believe by giving these individuals resources, flexibility and a network—powerful innovation can occur.

Here are our top five insights from the forum:

  1. Develop community engagement as an ongoing strategy for your public space work. Several speakers discussed the need to rethink engagement strategies. Engagement with residents and other stakeholders should be an ongoing strategy, not simply a one-time goal to meet. This is best achieved when the focus is on building trust and sustaining authentic relationships with your community. 
  2. Make equity the foundation. Ensuring that public spaces live up to their full potential as places for all means that principles of equity must be embedded from the start. Setting equity as the foundation means reconsidering every aspect of planning, designing, programming and managing public spaces to achieve fairness in process and outcomes. 
  3. Take time to look up and out. It’s easy to get caught up in the day-to-day aspects of managing public spaces, but it’s also important to look ahead at the trends and forces that will impact public spaces in the future. In Philadelphia, we were able to look up and out – in person— at various world class projects including Bartram’s Garden, Centennial Commons and Cherry Street Pier. Moreover, attendees identified several areas that intersect with public spaces—climate change, slow growth cities and smart cities—for further exploration.
  4. Prioritize opportunities for peer exchange. While attendees and speakers used the forum to share research, toolkits and other resources driving their work, they also noted how important it is for this field to come together for in-person learning. As this field continues to grow and develop, sharing resources — policy frameworks, messaging guides, outreach tools — for what works and identifying knowledge and resource gaps is that much more essential.
  5. Leverage both data and storytelling for reporting. Engaging storytelling is a necessary, but sometimes overlooked, element in building community support public spaces. One way to tell more meaningful stories is to bolster the narrative with data points that resonate with community members as well as local officials. It’s not enough to measure and report on outputs. Instead, the focus should be on measuring what matters to the community in an effort to demonstrate how a public space can further those goals.

Interested in learning more? View presentations and resources from the Knight Public Spaces Forum and watch Instagram Story updates live from the event. Learn more about Knight’s public spaces work here.

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Lilly Weinberg is director of community foundations at Knight Foundation.

Lynn Ross is the founder and principal of Spirit for Change Consulting, LLC; she is Knight Foundation’s lead consultant for its work supporting Reimagining the Civic Commons and the Knight Public Spaces Forum.

To landscape a pocket park along the Towpath Trail near downtown and prepare it for longterm maintenance.

To create a winter-themed creative placemaking campaign on 210 storefronts at K&A and reshape the negative narrative associated with the Kensington neighborhood and provide opportunities for local businesses to collaborate.

To deliver a civic engagement program designed to develop, connect, inform, engage, empower and retain Philadelphia’s young professionals for the broader benefit of the city.

On Oct. 23, 2019, Knight announced nearly $700,000 in new investments to foster a more connected, vibrant and prosperous Historic West End. Charles Thomas, Knight director in Charlotte, shares more about our work in the area below. 

Charlotte is at a crossroads, or at several crossroads, really.  

As you walk past the cranes and construction and hear reports of 60 new people arriving daily, it’s easy to overlook our bustling city’s persistent challenges related to economic mobility and opportunity.

With Charlotte’s growing economy and rapid development, historic and underserved neighborhoods outside of center city are experiencing rapid transition. Residents in these communities — such as those in the Historic West End — are excited about the chance to reap the benefits of growth. However, they also fear being priced out and displaced because they won’t have a voice in the development process or decision-making.

At Knight, we feel this is a critical moment in Charlotte’s growth to invest in a more informed and engaged community by supporting an approach to development that puts residents at the center of the conversation in order to foster vibrant, inclusive places with high economic opportunity.  

Since 2015, Knight has focused our efforts in the Historic West End district at Five Points and the three neighborhoods adjacent to Johnson C. Smith University.  The goal is to take advantage of new, substantial public and private investments in the area to design and implement a vision that reflects the desires of its residents, students and businesses. Our investments focus on three areas:

  • Promoting community engagement and ensuring Historic West End residents are connected to and participating in the corridor’s growth.
  • Increasing the neighborhood’s capacity to develop and drive a community vision. 
  • Supporting the creation and programming of public spaces and hubs that foster interaction and connection among residents.

Our investments have included support for  Charlotte Center City Partners and Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC), coordinating community development, building neighborhood capacity and developing anti-displacement strategies; the Five Points Community Collaborative and Historic West End Partners’ efforts to engage residents and support small businesses in the corridor; capacity building for the West Side Land Trust; and the pilot of Urban Main Street with the City of Charlotte to revitalize commercial districts. We also supported Project LIFT’s work to engage parents and improve digital literacy and internet connectivity for West End families. Including nearly $700,000 in new funding announced today, Knight has invested more than $5 million in West Charlotte since 2015.

Charlotte is at a crossroads, facing tough decisions that require input from grassroots leaders, nonprofits and private businesses alike. To ensure our city’s growth supports all Charlotteans, it’s critical that residents have access to the tools and resources necessary to guide public and private investment to foster neighborhoods of high opportunity.

What narratives are we going to choose to shape our city? At Knight, we hope Charlotte’s story can be one of connected communities and economic opportunity for all.

Charles Thomas is Knight’s director in Charlotte. You can follow him on Twitter at @cthomasclt.


Photo (top): West Charlotte community residents and friends participating in the land trust’s second community charrette. Courtesy of West Side Community Land Trust.