Materials

In 2025, Hope Corps objectives continue to advance Mayor Bruce Harrell’s Downtown Activation Plan. The plan’s purpose is to stabilize and transform Downtown into a place where residents, workers, and visitors want to spend time.

Individual artists, cultural producers, arts administrators, creative workers, community groups, and arts and cultural organizations should apply to Hope Corps. Propose projects that generate career opportunities for the local creative workforce, and contribute to the well-being of Seattle’s downtown community with community-driven projects, events, performances, and more.

Funding will go towards projects that employ creative workers through activations that uplift stories and audiences from historically unserved and/or underserved communities representing Seattle’s diversity in downtown neighborhoods:

  • Belltown
  • Central Downtown
  • Chinatown-International District
  • Denny Triangle
  • Pioneer Square
  • Stadium District

Proposed projects should be unique events or activations, taking place in 2025 in street-level, accessible, outdoor or otherwise publicly visible spaces that provide engaging experiences for the public and bring audiences downtown.

For more details on the Hope Corps grant, please read the full guidelines.

The guidelines are also available in these languages:

Application Preview

Use this document to draft your application responses:

Focus Areas

Projects should address one or more of the following focus areas:

  • Seattle is THRIVING - Creating a New Narrative for Downtown Seattle: Why do you love Seattle? What helps you feel safe in your community? What is the history of this place? What has Seattle survived? How is Seattle changing? What makes you proud to be a Seattleite? What do you want to see in Seattle’s future?
  • Placemaking, Place-keeping and Belonging - Who belongs in Seattle’s Downtown? Who belongs on Indigenous land? How do we live in community with our unhousedneighbors? Who has been excluded from opportunity in Seattle’s Downtown neighborhoods? How do the arts make our Downtown unique?
  • Climate and Water Justice - How do water and the natural environment shape our city? How do Seattleites relate to nature? How do Seattle’s residents steward the ecology around us? How can we create a healthy, resilient, and green Downtown? How can our city create a just, sustainable future?

Eligibility

You are eligible to apply for Hope Corps funding if you and your proposed activation project meet the following criteria:

  • You are an individual artist, organization, or community-based group located in, or presenting work regularly in, Seattle.
    • Organizations and individual artists representing communities most impacted by systemic oppression including low-income, people with disabilities, immigrant and refugee communities, and communities of color are encouraged to apply.
  • Your activation project must occur between January 2025 and December 2025.
  • Your activation project and its associated public benefit must take place in Downtown Seattle within the identified Downtown Activation Plan boundary
  • Your activation project must address one or more of the three focus areas of this program
  • Your activation project must be promoted and made accessible to the general public – Seattle residents, workers, and visitors – to attend. This includes a free attendance option and accessibility for people who primarily speak languages other than English and people with disabilities.
  • Your activation project must pay each creative worker* a living wage, whether through wages, stipends, or contract payments. We define a living wage as $32 per hour or more (this may vary for youth and students).
  • Your activation project may have a virtual component, but it must be primarily an in-person experience.
  • If your activation project is a temporary art installation, it must be displayed for at least 3 months.

*Creative workers include artists, creatives, cultural workers, and everyone in between.

The following are not eligible for funding:

  • Permanent installations and mural projects
  • Capital improvement projects
  • Religious services
  • Fundraisers or private events

Funding

Funding amounts range from $5,000 - $50,000.

Due Date

Tuesday, Sep. 3, 2024, 5:00 p.m. Pacific

Please allow ample time to complete your application. Applications submitted after the 5 p.m. (Pacific) deadline will not be accepted.

Information Workshops

Learn more about this grant and how to submit your best application. We highly encourage first-time applicants to view this session.

Application

Apply online through Submittable.

If you don’t have computer or internet access, or would like to discuss alternative ways of applying, contact Alex Rose, Hope Corps Program Manager, as soon as possible: Alex.Rose@seattle.gov.

If you have trouble, check the Submittable FAQ for step-by-step guides. You can also contact Submittable tech support at support@submittable.com.

Info

For questions about this opportunity, or help with the online application, please contact project manager, Alex Rose. 

We have interpreters who can speak to you in your language, including American Sign Language (via video). Just call us and tell us what language you speak. Expect a short pause while we find an interpreter to join the call.

The artist stands on a step ladder as a group of students point upwards at a colorful mural.
"I was really moved by how supportive, satisfied, and enthusiastic the students and neighbors were throughout the process." — Carolyn Hitt, Muralist at Rogers Playground

Arts & Culture

Gülgün Kayim, Director
Address: 303 S. Jackson Street, Top Floor, Seattle, WA , 98104
Mailing Address: PO Box 94748, Seattle, WA , 98124-4748
Phone: (206) 684-7171
Fax: (206) 684-7172
arts.culture@seattle.gov

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The Office of Arts & Culture promotes the value of arts and culture in, and of, communities throughout Seattle. It strives to ensure that a wide range of high-quality artistic experiences are available to everyone, encourage artist-friendly arts and cultural policy.