Downtown Providence Parks Conservancy Awarded $395K Grant

GoLocalProv News Team

Downtown Providence Parks Conservancy Awarded $395K Grant

The Champlin Foundations has granted $395,000 to the Downtown Providence Parks Conservancy (DPPC) to create a pedestrian gateway in Burnside Park in partnership with The Providence Foundation.

This significant investment will create a more visible pedestrian connection along Exchange Street between the train station and Rhode Island Public Transit Authority (RIPTA) bus berths. The passageway will remain safe, clean and well-lit, and this project will encourage healthy activity in our downtown public spaces. Construction is scheduled to begin next spring, with completion expected in late summer 2014.

First proposed during a community charrette in 2008, this gateway improvement project is one of several transformative changes planned within Greater Kennedy Plaza next year. The city of Providence has committed $1.7 million from its downtown circulator project to reconfigure traffic patterns around the parks. With support from RIPTA, plans call for the relocation of bus berths to the outside of Kennedy Plaza to make way for a pedestrian plaza and market.

“I thank The Champlin Foundations for this generous funding to advance our efforts to revitalize Greater Kennedy Plaza and make downtown Providence a more vibrant, cultural and commercial gateway to our capital city,” said Mayor Angel Taveras. “Working together with our partners, we are improving our downtown public spaces and providing more opportunities for visitors, businesses and residents to enjoy them.”


Cliff Wood, executive director of the DPPC, added, “We are so thankful to The Champlin Foundations for this important award. It moves our theory of the gateway into reality. Every major city needs a place where people can congregate, and a strong public-private partnership is required to manage that space. With energized support from our government officials and robust capital partner investments that prioritize the transformation of Greater Kennedy Plaza, we can ensure this project’s success. We have been fortunate to have both.”

The DPPC aims to reinvent and redefine the city center by working with the city of Providence and community partners. With a small staff and limited budget, the DPPC has benefited from major grants for programming and infrastructure in recent years. In 2011, the National Endowment for the Arts gave $200,000 to a coalition that included the DPPC for programming and public space improvements. These funds helped to organize a large-scale multi-stage event, the FirstWorks Festival on the Plaza. The festival engaged the public with live performances by 200 artists in September 2012. This summer, Southwest Airlines funded the construction of an Imagination Center, equipped with children’s books and play rooms, to make the area more welcoming to families.

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To date, the grant from The Champlin Foundations is the largest single contribution to the DPPC. Since 1932, The Champlin Foundations have distributed nearly $480 million to tax exempt organizations for capital needs. They aim to support Rhode Island based organizations that have the greatest impact on a broad segment of the population.


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