12 Aug 27 Ideas Advance in 2015 Knight Green Line Challenge
This post originally appeared on Knight Blog, the blog of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation
Posted by George Abbott
Photo credit: Michael Bolden.
After reading every one of the 358 applications submitted for the $500,000 available in the 2015 Knight Green Line Challenge I can safely say that St. Paul isn’t lacking in ideas, or the passionate people who can make them happen. Today we announce the 27 projects that have been selected as finalists in this year’s challenge.
The Knight Green Line Challenge seeks to spark community success by making the neighborhoods along the central corridor more vibrant places. Specifically we were looking for projects that tap into the potential of the Green Line to excite current residents – and attract new ones, to bring diverse groups of people together and fuel economic opportunity, and to build and sustain a strong culture of civic engagement.
We know that those three drivers are key to St. Paul’s success and we saw a wide range of approaches in the pool of applications. The biggest theme in the applications – and among the finalists – was sparking a more vibrant and inclusive public life. Ideas selected as finalists range from providing, or testing, new spaces for people to mingle, encouraging exploration of local neighborhoods or even sparking a new selfie craze in front of local businesses.
The finalists will gather next week with Knight Foundation and Saint Paul Foundation staff to discuss their proposals and receive feedback on why they stood out. They have a couple of weeks to answer additional questions and flesh out their ideas before their final proposals are considered by a panel of expert readers.
The readers will review these final proposals on the same criteria as the first round. They’ll be looking for proposals that are innovative for St. Paul and that offer a new approach that could yield promising results. They’ll be looking for proposals that offer an opportunity for learning. They’ll be looking for proposals that the applicant can successfully execute within the 12-month grant period and that have a well-thought-out and reasonable budget. Most of all they’ll be looking for proposals that can leverage the potential of the Green Line and advance the three key drivers of city success mentioned above.
But what about the many good ideas that didn’t make it? We hope to stay in touch with all of the participants and make them part of Knight’s network. And we’re always open to hearing ideas for projects that align with Knight’s priorities.
Thanks to all of those who submitted their ideas and to our readers who spent hours reading them. We’re excited to see the final applications and will announce the winners in late September.
George Abbott is special assistant to the vice president for community and national initiatives and interim program director for St. Paul at Knight Foundation. He can be reached via email at abbott@knightfoundation.org. Follow him on Twitter @garthurabbott.
2015 Knight Green Line Challenge Finalists
Block by Block (8 80 Cities)
To work with community leaders in six Green Line neighborhoods to host block parties that will help build community connections and rethink public space.
Bridging the Gap: Connecting the Green Line to the Greenway and Beyond (St. Anthony Park Community Council)
To develop a coalition to explore connecting the Midtown Greenway to the Green Line via the Short Line Bridge, an iconic and historic route over the Mississippi River.
Charles and Griggs Bikeways Tool Station (Erin Pavlica)
To create a bike tool station at the Charles/Griggs Bikeways intersection where riders can stop, connect and learn more about bike maintenance.
Creating a Heart in the Zone: A Market for Body, Mind and Soul (Michael Russelle)
To strengthen community ties in the Creative Enterprise Zone by developing a new pop-up market designed as a vibrant town square where people can meet, shop, eat and enjoy artistic performances.
Dale Street Local (Michael Olson and David Marston)
To strengthen community bonds by adding contextual information that highlights the unique attributes of surrounding neighborhoods at the Dale Street Station.
Designing the Little Africa Cultural Corridor (African Economic Development Solutions)
To develop a new plan for urban design in Little Africa by combining feedback from community members and technical experts with placemaking activities.
Energy Equals Movement and Community Squared (E=MC2) (We Lighting LLC)
To better connect the Mississippi River path to downtown by enhancing the walkability of the Sibley underpass through creative lighting.
Engaging a Diverse Community To Shape a Shared Vision for a New Park (The Trust for Public Land)
To work with diverse residents near Lexington and University streets to develop a community vision for a new park.
Food Truck Mingle! (St. Paul Area Chamber of Commerce)
To transform a vacant Central Station lot into a food truck corral where downtown workers and transit riders can mingle and break bread together.
Fourth Street Festival (Minnesota Museum of American Art)
To bring to life a vision for a car-free downtown corridor by opening Fourth Street to pedestrians and bikes for a one-day festival of art, performance and music.
Friendship Forest (Amanda Lovelee)
To creatively unite residents and beautify the urban environment by planting 500 trees in one day on vacant, underused land along the Green Line.
Green Line Commons (Rice Park Association)
To link five downtown public spaces between Central Station and Rice Park to create a dynamic, new public commons.
Green Line Community Visioning Parklet (Jim Ivey)
To create a toolkit that will help users convert an on-street parking space into a temporary parklet to engage people in shaping their community.
Green UP Union Park (Union Park District Council)
To engage the Union Park community in developing an inviting pocket park that creates an attractive, pedestrian-friendly gateway to the Snelling Green Line station.
Griggs Park Community Green Space (The Trust for Public Land)
To work with diverse residents near Lexington and University streets to develop a community vision for a new park.
Historic Rondo Village (Aurora St. Anthony Neighborhood Development Corp.)
To explore the creation of a family-oriented, multi-use park near Lexington Parkway with open air markets and festivals in the summer and ice skating in the winter.
Improved Walkability through Signage (Matt Privratsky)
To encourage people to explore neighborhoods near the Green Line by improving maps on existing signs with more engaging navigational cues and information.
Johnny Baby’s Rondo Park (Johnny Baby’s)
To strengthen neighborhood life in Frogtown by creating a new gathering space within an underutilized parking lot.
Little Africa Weekend Market (Little Africa Development Group)
To provide a space for African immigrant entrepreneurs and artists to showcase their products and ideas at a Little Africa Weekend Market.
Living Landmarks: Resident-Led Neighborhood Tours (Minnesota Historical Society)
To offer a series of new community-led walking tours that highlight the unique strengths and qualities of Central Corridor neighborhoods.
Mind If I Sit Here? (Heather Cole)
To promote more interaction between residents and improve neighborhood life in downtown St. Paul by inviting people to take part in brown-bag conversations that change location regularly.
River Balcony Prototyping Festival (Saint Paul Riverfront Corp.)
To prototype ideas to develop a vibrant River Balcony, a civic walkway with a mix of shopping, living, and interactive art that links downtown Green Line riders to the Mississippi River area and adjacent parks and trails.
Rock the Public Meeting (St. Paul Smart Trips)
To increase resident participation in transportation planning along the Green Line through creative, youth-led pop-up placemaking projects in Frogtown.
Rondo Commemorative Plaza and Garden (Rondo Avenue Inc.)
To create an interactive, technology-driven public space where visitors can learn about the history of the African-American community of Rondo.
St. Paul Green Line Better Block (Team Better Block)
To engage residents in rapid prototyping of changes they would like to see in their neighborhood.
Storefront Selfies! (West Bank Business Association)
To create a beautiful visual landscape along the Green Line by pairing local artists with business owners to improve façades with creative signage, murals and brilliant lights.
Turning Businesses Into Developers Projects (Craig Blakely)
To provide local businesses with advice from development experts so that they can redevelop their sites and avoid displacement.
weeCinema (The Film Society of Minneapolis-St. Paul)
To create a fanciful, moveable theater in a freight container that can pop up in public spaces along the Green Line.