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Find similar grantsCapital Projects Grant Program is sponsored by DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities. Provides support for qualified nonprofit arts, humanities, and arts education organizations in the District of Columbia for capital projects, including facilities, technology, equipment, or digital assets.
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Capital Projects Grant Program | dcarts Capital Projects Grant Program The Capital Projects grant program (formerly Facilities and Buildings) supports organizations. Eligible organizations fall into three categories: Those that own or rent facilities. Those that intend to own facilities.
Those that seek capital project support for permanent property, technology, equipment, or digital assets. These assets are designed for the training, management, production, or presentation of performances or exhibitions of the arts or humanities.
Promote the stability, sustainable growth, and longevity of the District’s arts and humanities organizations; Preserve and strengthen structures, systems, and infrastructure for District arts and humanities organizations, their constituents, and their collections; Enable and ensure access to high-quality physical spaces and equipment for the District’s arts and humanities organizations; Reduce the risk of organizational displacement; and Foster arts and humanities access for all District residents.
CP Request for Applications The FY 2026 CP RFA closed on Thursday, June 26, 2025. The FY 2026 CP Large RFA closed on Wednesday, December 17, 2025 The FY 2027 CP RFAs scheduled to be released in 2026. View our FY 2025 CP Grantees .
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Nonprofit arts, humanities, and arts education organizations located in the District of Columbia. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Capital Projects Grant Program is funded by DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in District of Columbia. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Jerome Early-Career Project Grants is a grant from Forecast Public Art, funded by the Jerome Foundation, that funds the creation of new public art projects by early-career artists based in Minnesota. Two grants of $8,000 each are awarded annually to support temporary or permanent public artworks anywhere in Minnesota. Projects may be supported by public or nonprofit agencies but private commissions are not eligible, and a secured project site is required at the time of application. The program places special emphasis on supporting BIPOC and Native artists, LGBTQIA+ artists, women artists, immigrant artists, rural artists, and artists with disabilities. Eligible applicants are Minnesota-based individual artists with 2–10 years of generative experience. The application deadline was October 15, 2025.
The Local Cultural Council Program is a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council distributing $1,000 to $10,000 through a statewide network of 329 Local Cultural Councils (LCCs) representing every city and town in the Commonwealth. Each LCC awards funds based on local community cultural needs as assessed by council members. Eligible applicants include artists, nonprofits, schools, and organizations pursuing arts, humanities, and science projects. Applications are submitted directly to local councils and are typically due by October 16. Grants from most LCCs are reimbursement-based. Massachusetts Cultural Council funds the LCCs centrally, which then regrant to community projects.
NEA Grants for Arts Projects runs its second FY cycle with a July 9 Part 1 (Grants.gov) deadline and a July 21 Part 2 (Applicant Portal) deadline. Awards run $10,000–$100,000 against a mandatory 1:1 match, and only 501(c)(3)s with five years of arts programming qualify. Here's how the two-step submission, the match math, and the five-year rule decide who actually gets funded.
Read articleRoundhouse funds rural Oregon and Tribal communities exclusively, across arts, education, environmental stewardship, and social services. Its Spring 2026 Open Call alone moved $1.6M to 125 organizations. The Fall Open Call runs June 10 to August 14, 2026. Here is how a place-based family foundation actually evaluates applicants — and how rural nonprofits should approach it.
Read articleThe OpenAI Foundation opened applications June 15 for $50M in unrestricted, one-time grants to U.S. 501(c)(3) public charities — but a tight $500K–$10M operating-budget band, a 10-percent-of-budget award ceiling, and an explicit ban on fiscal-sponsorship arrangements have made eligibility a sharper filter than the AI-curiosity test most applicants are focused on. Here is the strategic landscape, the three program lanes, and what the October notification timeline means for nonprofits considering a Q4 launch.
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