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Expanding possibilities for renters who want solar, and for animation in Africa

Arts groups are using new funding models to escape gentrification

As property values skyrocket in the United States, artists are often pushed out of neighborhoods.

But in Chicago, Heaven Gallery’s Director Alma Weiser opted to establish a perpetual purpose trust that will allow a new nonprofit to pursue grants to support artists and operate their building for profit at the same time. The large, remodeled space will host a retail tenant to help pay the mortgage.

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, opportunities emerge for German apartment renters who want to hang their own solar panels, for arts organizations fighting gentrification, and for animation fans looking for African content.

In Greater Boston, an estimated 2 million square feet of cultural space has recently disappeared as it has been developed. Operating the nation’s first democratically controlled investment fund, the Boston Ujima Project has disbursed $1.6 million to assist artists and small businesses in communities of color.

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