Emily Llamazales Emily Llamazales

Development on Auburn Avenue aims to revitalize historic neighborhood

HDDCs The Front Porch on Auburn is a $37 million project that will bring affordable housing and new retail. HDDC is targeting graduate students and those in the entertainment and hospitality industries. Rents will be set for people making 80% of the area median income — or $60,200 a year for individuals and $86,000 for a family of four. Lease terms will range from three months to 18 months and Joseph estimates the average rent will range from $1,200 to $1,400, including utilities.

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Emily Llamazales Emily Llamazales

‘Truly affordable’ project comes to market in Southwest ATL

The Atlanta Land Trust’s 36-unit community of for-sale townhomes known as, Avenue at Oakland City, is located off Murphy Ave and only four blocks from the BeltLine’s Westside Trail. All townhomes are being reserved for buyers earning at or below 100% of the area median income. Buyers can also qualify for down payment assistance funds through Invest Atlanta, Atlanta Housing, and Atlanta Neighborhood Development Partnership.

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Emily Llamazales Emily Llamazales

Denied: Alabama's broken parole system

Redemption Earned, led by its Executive Director, former Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Sue Bell Cobb, helped secure the release of Robert George. Mr. George, who is 85 and in failing health, has served 31 years in prison for manslaughter. The state fought his release despite the victim's mother's plea for clemency.

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Emily Llamazales Emily Llamazales

New Homes in Atlanta’s Old Fourth Ward

The Historic District Development Corporation (HDDC) and Mercy Housing Southeast are proud to be part of an important partnership to redevelop a 1950s-era apartment complex in the historic Old Fourth Ward, one of Atlanta’s fastest gentrifying neighborhoods where increasing property values risk forcing long-time residents out of their homes. Built in 1951, the existing 58 uninsulated cinderblock apartments will be replaced with 76 newly constructed, energy-efficient apartment homes in a mixed-use development that will also include a grocery store or other retail to the property.

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Emily Llamazales Emily Llamazales

Center for Civil and Human Rights realizing its initial dream

Construction fencing surrounds the perimeter of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights to make way for the $56 million, 24,000-square-foot expansion of the living museum. The expansion will feature a three-story West Wing with a café and three new galleries — a Family Gallery for children under 12, a gallery that will tell the story of the Reconstruction Era and a Special Exhibitions Gallery for traveling and rotating exhibitions.

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Emily Llamazales Emily Llamazales

Phyllis Wheatley center, once a Green Book haven for Black students and artists, turns 100

The center was founded in October 1924 as the Phyllis Wheatley Settlement House. The building was established to help the growing African American community that was new to Minneapolis. Providing kids the chance to explore the outdoors, listen to the sounds of nature and take a dip in a lake had been a high priority for Phyllis Wheatley. And this year, the Phyllis Wheatley Community Center is turning 100 years old and celebrating a century of its mission.

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Adi Bates Adi Bates

L.E.A.D. Center For Youth featured on Closer Look with Rose Scott

A special edition of “Closer Look with Rose Scott” was a themed show focusing on the mentoring of young Black boys.

Show host Rose Scott spoke with several guests, including L.E.A.D. Center For Youth founders CJ and Kelli Stewart who exemplify the transformative power of mentorship through their athletic-based programs. The interview also included current Ambassadors— student-athletes in L.E.A.D.’s program.

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Guest User Guest User

Historic Clayborn Temple featured in Nonprofit Quarterly

Anasa Troutman wears many hats (including being a record producer), but in this interview, the focus is on her role as executive director of Historic Clayborn Temple, a $25 million project to restore a building that was the central organizing hub of the 1968 sanitation workers’ strike in Memphis.

“Our hope and our vision for the building is that it will be a place of gathering and a place of story, but also… a place for intersectional conversation.”

-Anasa Troutman

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Adi Bates Adi Bates

Cobb Landmarks & Historical Society Featured in the AJC

Trevor Beeman, executive director of Cobb Landmarks + Historical Society, gives a tour of the circa 1840 Power-Jackson Cabin in east Cobb County, which could be the area's oldest structure. His organization is raising funds to restore the cabin and move it to nearby Hyde Farm.

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Adi Bates Adi Bates

Atlanta collaboration wins the Bloomberg Philanthropies Public Art Challenge

The City of Atlanta, NBAF, CDC Foundation and Out of Hand Theater collaborate to win the Bloomberg Philanthropies Public Art Challenge.

The City of Atlanta, NBAF, CDC Foundation and Out of Hand Theater collaborate to win the Bloomberg Philanthropies Public Art Challenge

Bloomberg Philanthropies has selected the City of Atlanta as a winner of a grant of up to $1 million as part of its Public Art Challenge. This unique grant program supports temporary public art projects that address important local civic issues in cities across the country.

NBAF, in partnership with the City of Atlanta, the CDC Foundation and Out of Hand Theater will produce “Thriving Together,” which will address healthcare disparities through large-scale installations, community dinners, a mobile art gallery, and a festival – all of which will be curated through the lens of racial equity in public health.

Atlanta is one of just 8 winning cities, from more than 150 project proposals received from cities in 40 U.S. states. The project will be developed over the next two years and will bring people together to address public health through community-driven public art.

Visit publicartchallenge.bloomberg.org erg.org/to learn more about the Bloomberg Philanthropies Public Art Challenge and stay tuned for updates as the City of Atlanta’s project comes to life.

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Guest User Guest User

Three Atlanta foundations reaping rewards of sharing office space

by Maria Saporta | October 2, 2023

Walking inside the shared foundation offices in the 191 Peachtree Tower, the first large space one sees is a large conference room that doubles as a board room.

This is the new home of the following three foundations:

  • The Tull Charitable Foundation, founded in 1952 with a current endowment of about $85 million, giving away about $3.5 million a year

  • The R. Howard Dobbs Jr. Foundation, founded in 1959 with a current endowment of $60 million, giving away about $2.5 million a year

  • The Sartain Lanier Family Foundation, founded in 1963 with a current endowment of $110 million, giving away about $5 million a year

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Natalia Garzón Martínez Natalia Garzón Martínez

Atlanta Land Trust featured in Saporta Report

Purpose Possible client, Atlanta Land Trust, was featured on the Saporta Report. The organization just completed a $13.9 million campaign to develop three housing communities in the city of Atlanta with a total of 120 units — 90 of which will be permanently affordable. In addition to these three communities, the Atlanta Land Trust has 15 single-family homes under development.

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Natalia Garzón Martínez Natalia Garzón Martínez

Georgia Innocence Project featured on WABE

WABE features Georgia Innocence Project, an organization that works to free wrongfully convicted people through DNA testing. They interview Calvin Johnson, who talks about his voting rights being restored, and who is now a representative for the organization.

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Natalia Garzón Martínez Natalia Garzón Martínez

Mailchimp Intuit Featured on The Caring Economy Podcast

Lain Shakespeare (who leads strategic philanthropy for Intuit and Mailchimp) is featured on The Caring Economy podcast: Empowering Communities Through Business: Mailchimp's Lain Shakespeare on Corporate Citizenship”

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