You can browse or search through this gallery of 100+ nonprofit co-locations in the United States, Canada, and abroad. This gallery is an ongoing project. To suggest additions or revisions, please email Diane Vinokur, dkv@umich.edu
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Cameron Center
95 Mahalani StreetWailuku, Maui, HI 96793
USA
Agency Type: Mixed
Established 1973
Maui's Cameron Center is a central location where many tax-exempt, community-serving agencies share space to make their services more convenient to everyone. The Cameron Center currently houses 16 nonprofits in health, social services, culture, and the arts in 6 buildings that share a common roof.
The center also:
Offers meeting and auditorium space to community groups
Serves as a polling place
Serves as the largest neighbor island site for blood donations
Provides start-up assistance to agencies
Helps coordinate special events for organizations
[Text adapted from website]
Description last updated on 11-Jul-05
http://www.cameroncenter.comContact:
Audrey Reed, president and chief executive officer
camcntr@mauigateway.com
808-244-5546/Fax: 808-242-1857
Center for Rural Development
2292 South Highway 27, Suite 300Somerset, KY 42501
USA
Agency Type: Community development
Established 1996
The Center for Rural Development is a nonprofit organization whose primary mission is to ensure that no young person will need to leave home to find his or her future. Covering a 40-county service area in Southern and Eastern Kentucky, the center strives to improve the quality of life for this region.
It has 12 partner organizations affiliated with its community economic development and community quality of life efforts. The center's building serves rural Kentucky through a variety of development programs including planning, training, cultural events, and telecommunications technology and by providing meeting/convention space. These services are offered both by the center and through the partner agencies housed there. [Text adapted from website]
Description last updated on 11-Jul-05
http://www.centertech.comContact:
Lonnie Lawson, president and CEO
606-677-6000/Fax: 606-677-6010
Center in the Square
One Market Square SERoanoke, VA 24011-1434
USA
Agency Type: Arts/Education
Established 1983
Center in the Square is a regional cultural center housed in the historic former Norfolk & Western Passenger Train Station, a building that originally opened in 1905 and became a gateway to the region. It provides rent-free housing, security, building maintenance, and housekeeping for several emerging nonprofit museums and a live theater.
Center in the Square is owned and operated by the Western Virginia Foundation for the Arts and Sciences. This foundation provides over $2.5 million annually in support to seven cultural organizations that have enriched the lives and economic condition of Western and Southwest Virginians. The center draws over 600,000 visitors annually from across the nation and 40 foreign countries. These visitors include nearly 300,000 children from 44% of Virginia's school districts whose educational experiences are enriched significantly by the seven organizations. [Text adapted from website]
Description last updated on 15-Jul-05
www.centerinthesquare.orgContact:
Susan Martin, vice president of development and foundation relations
smartin@centerinthesquare.org
(540) 342-5700
Centro del Pueblo
474 Valencia StreetSan Francisco, CA
USA
Agency Type: Mixed
Established 1992
Centro del Pueblo is San Francisco's first nonprofit-owned, mixed-use office and affordable housing complex. This investment has proved beneficial for the more than 200,000 community members (in 1999) who accessed the array of direct services the co-located agencies provide on site. The nonprofits also provide affordable housing and services to residents of the on-site 52-unit Plaza del Sol serving low-and moderate-income families.
This site houses both nonprofit tenant landlord partners and additional nonprofit tenants. The agencies monitor lending institutions on their Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) performance. One of the faith-based members provided volunteers to assist with projects in low-income areas of California, Arizona, and New Mexico. The collaboration also has built several hundred units of affordable housing.
[Text adapted from past correspondence and conversations between administrative staff and Diane Kaplan Vinokur]
Description last updated on 01-Jul-05
Contact:Larry Del Carlo
415-241-6183
Children & Family Services Center
601 E. 5th StreetCharlotte, NC 28277
USA
Agency Type: Human Services--General or Mixed
Established 2003
Key child- and family-focused nonprofits joined with community leaders in Charlotte, North Carolina, to create a stable environment in which they could save administrative operating expenses and serve their clients more comprehensively.
After a process of identifying related organizations with interest in the project, nine respected agencies made the decision to form the Children and Family Service Center (CFSC). The CFSC is a separate 501©3 governed by the board of directors made up of representatives from each of the participating agencies as well as at-large community leaders. The executive directors of the participating agencies act as liaison to the board through their board representatives as well as through the Executive Directors' Council.
A $9 million capital campaign, chaired by Hugh L. McColl, Jr., retired chairman of Bank of America, to build the building was successfully concluded in late 2001; groundbreaking occurred in January 2002 and the agencies moved into the new facility in early 2003. The agencies occupy approximately 68% of the 100,000 square feet in the building; the remainder of the building is financed and leased by market-rate tenants.
CFSC partner agencies reach over 150,000 clients each year and have combined revenues of $34 million. The agencies serve the families and children affected by the multiple challenges of poverty, homelessness, child abuse/neglect, lack of school readiness, school dropout, poor parenting skills, and domestic violence. The clients are 66% minority and 61% female.
Collaboration has been the key to the success of this project, and the nine agencies are working to gain capacity and efficiencies while improving effectiveness by sharing space, technology, management services, and programming. [Text adapted from website]
Description last updated on 30-Jun-05
http://www.childrenfamily.orgContact:
Peggy Eagan, executive director
peagan@childrenfamily.org
704-943-9400/Fax: 730-367-2778
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