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Flint Cultural Center

Coordinates: 43°1′21″N 83°40′44″W / 43.02250°N 83.67889°W / 43.02250; -83.67889
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Spshu (talk | contribs) at 23:30, 22 May 2018 (CS Mott Foundation annual gift, Planetarium, Spotlight Series, budget, staff). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Flint Cultural Center
campus
The campus of the Flint Cultural Center
The campus of the Flint Cultural Center
CountryUSA
StateMichigan
CountyGenesee
CityFlint
Area
 • Total
13.37 ha (33.04 acres)
Websitewww.flintculturalcenter.com

The Flint Cultural Center (FCC) is a campus of cultural, scientific, and artistic institutes located in Flint, Michigan, United States. The institutions located on the grounds of the FCC are the Flint Institute of Arts, Flint Institute of Music, Sloan Museum,[1] Flint Public Library, Buick Gallery & Research Center, Robert T. Longway Planetarium, The Whiting, and the Bower Theatre. The campus and some institutions are owned by Flint Cultural Center Corporation.

The campus is 33 acres in size and is owned by the Flint Cultural Center Corporation.[2] The Flint Public Library owns its own building.[3] Flint Institute of Music and Flint Institute of Arts are non-profits independent from the Flint Cultural Center Corporation, but lease their buildings from the cultural center.[2]

History

The City of Flint School District in 1920 purchased the old Oak Grove sanitarium and 60 adjoining acres plus later added other private lots. In 1946, the College and Cultural Center campus was started by C.S. Mott after he learned of University of Michigan President Alexander Grant Ruthven indicated the possibility of forming university branches in other areas of Michigan. Mott pledged a match towards developing a four-year college if Flint city voters pass a $7-million bond issue, which they did. Plus Mott donated land, 32 acres in the early 1950s and additional 6.25 acres in 1955 for a new campus. The first building constructed in 1954 for the new college campus was Ballenger Field House. With UM talks dragging on, Flint Community Junior College moved to the campus in 1955.[2]

In the early 1950s, Flint Journal editor Michael A. Gorman felt that educational and cultural opportunities should be available to residents given its status as a factory town. Gorman was involved with an informal group that met at his home on Calumet to play cards and discussion Flint's future. This group was thus called the Calumet Club. The club changed into the Committee of Sponsors for the Flint College and Cultural Development. Leadership of the Committee was: executive director Robert T. Robison, president Robert T. Longway, Buick vice president and assistant general manager from 1929-32, first vice president F.A. "Dutch" Bower, Buick's chief engineer from 1929-36 and executive committee chairman Gorman. Honorary chairman were Mott, GM president Harlow H. Curtice and retired (1929) Buick engineer Enos A. DeWaters.[2]

The Flint Board of Education was chosen by the founders to oversee the cultural campus and its reserve funds. The reserve funds were raised to go towards annual operational and maintenance costs. But these funds were insufficient to upgrade buildings nor fund new programs.[2]

The committee set a goal of $25 million for their initial fundraising goal. In honor of its 50-millionth car, General Motors contributed $3 million in starter funds. Starting in 1954, donation was open to the public but in $25,000 increments. 400 individuals and 100 corporations, businesses and organizations donated at this sponsor level with most giving over the minimum. The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation shifted its annual gift, started in 1928, from the Flint Institute of Arts to the Flint Cultural Center.[2]

In 1958, Gorman died before the campus was finished. But cultural center buildings did start to open that year while the last of the original buildings finished in 1967 and were named after automotive pioneers.[2]

The Committee of Sponsors continued fundraising until the 1990s, but did the bulk of their fundraising in its first 10 years. The Flint Cultural Center Corporation was established in 1992 after the Flint Board of Education and the Committee of Sponsors had done some strategic planning with community participation. At first, the corporation managed the grounds on behalf of the school district, under a lease management agreement, and was governing body for Longway Planetarium, Sloan Museum and Whiting Auditorium.[2]

A major capital and endowment campaign to support the FCCC, the FIA and FIM was started in 1995 and raised over $33 million. While $7.1 million was used to renovate The Whiting, a project completed in 1999, the remained where placed into endowment funds.[2]

Longway and Bower were connect via a $2.65-million 2000 addition consisting of classroom and rehearsal space.[2]


The FIA underwent a $20-million renovation and expansion through its own fundraising efforts. The FIM also staged an $8.2-million campaign for expansion, remodeling and endowment.

Beginning in 2010, the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation made annual grants over $3 million, of split between the Corporation and the two other private Cultural Center organizations.[4][5][6][7]

In September 2013, the FCCC purchased the Sarvis Center and Central Kitchen from the Flint Community Schools for $150,000 despite some community opposition thinking that the price was too low and there was no other bidders.[8]

On May 14, 2018, the center corporation submitted a request to vacate parts of three public streets on the campus. This a preliminary move to make way for a possible arts and science focused charter school.[1]

Flint Cultural Center Corporation

Flint Cultural Center Corporation
Company typeNonprofit corporation
Founded(1992 (1992))
Headquarters
Key people
  • Mark Sinila (COO)[1]
  • Todd Slisher
  • (Executive Director, Sloan-Longway)
  • Jarret M. Haynes
  • (Executive Director, The Whiting)
Revenue$6 million (2014 budget)[3]
Number of employees
  • 50 full-time
  • 75-100 part-time
  • (2014)[3]
DivisionsThe Whiting
Sloan-Longway
Websitefcccorp.org

Flint Cultural Center Corporation (FCCC) is a non-profit corporation that manages the Flint Cultural Center. The FCCC is responsible for all aspects of governance and operation of Longway Planetarium, Sloan Museum, and The Whiting.[1]

The Flint Cultural Center Corporation established in 1992 after the Flint Board of Education and the Committee of Sponsors had done some strategic planning with community participation. At first, the corporation managed the grounds on behalf of the school district, under a lease management agreement, and was governing body for Longway Planetarium, Sloan Museum and Whiting Auditorium. In 1993-94, the corporation launched the Showcase Series at the Whiting Auditorium with five shows in the lineup.[2]

The Flint City School district transferred in July 2003 the Flint Youth Theatre program to the FCCC. Except for the Flint Public Library and the Sarvis Center, the Cultural Center campus was deeded over to the corporation in October 2004. The Spotlight Series, formerly the Showcase Series, had 27 performances in 2008.[2]

Sloan-Longway

Sloan-Longway, stylized as Sloan*Longway, is an operational division of the Flint Cultural Center Corporation. The division operates three venues Alfred P. Sloan Museum, Robert T. Longway Planetarium and Buick Automotive Gallery and Research Center.[3]

Buildings

Original (constructed 1958-1967)[2]
  • F.A. Bower Theater
  • Flint Institute of Arts, formerly Enos A. and Sarah DeWaters Art Center
  • J. Dallas Dort Music Center
  • Flint Public Library
  • Robert T. Longway Planetarium is a building run by Sloan-Longway division of the Flint Cultural Center. The planetarium had a April 9, 1957 ground-breaking ceremony and was built for $600,000 with the interior geodesic dome was designed by inventor/architect Buckminster Fuller. Its first public show was on June 29, 1958. From 1999-2000, a expansion and renovation connected it to Bower Theater. C.S. Mott Foundation was the primary funder of this project that added a lobby, a science classroom, Digistar II star projector, laser equipment and new seating.[9]
  • Sarvis Conference Center, named after Arthur H. Sarvis
  • Alfred P. Sloan Museum
  • The Whiting, formerly James H. Whiting Auditorium, renovated 1997 to 1999
Additional
  • Buick Automotive Gallery and Research Center


References

  1. ^ a b c d Fonger, Ron (May 16, 2018). [www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2018/05/flint_cultural_center_streets.html "Flint Cultural Center street vacations could clear way for possible charter school"]. Flint Journal. MLive Media Group. Retrieved May 16, 2018. {{cite news}}: Check |url= value (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Azizian, Carol (July 11, 2008). "Community supporters made Flint Cultural Center a reality". Flint Journal. MLive Media Group. Retrieved May 16, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d Ketchum III, William E. (February 27, 2014). "Flint Cultural Center Corp. seeks new leader after president and CEO resigns". MLive.com. Retrieved May 16, 2018.
  4. ^ "Mott Foundation Awards $3.25 Million to Flint Cultural Institutions". Philanthropy News Digest. Foundation Center. July 28, 2010. Retrieved June 21, 2014.
  5. ^ "Mott Foundation Awards $3.6 Million to Flint's Cultural Center". Philanthropy News Digest. Foundation Center. September 29, 2011. Retrieved June 21, 2014.
  6. ^ "Mott Foundation Awards Grants Totaling $3.8 Million to Flint Cultural Center Institutions". Philanthropy News Digest. Foundation Center. August 3, 2012. Retrieved June 21, 2014.
  7. ^ "Mott Foundation Awards $3.7 Million in Support of Flint Cultural Institutions". Philanthropy News Digest. Foundation Center. Retrieved June 21, 2014.
  8. ^ Keller, Andrew (October 17, 2013). "Flint School Board agrees to sell Sarvis Center". WNEM.com. Meredith Corporation. Retrieved June 21, 2014.
  9. ^ Azizian, Carol (May 7, 2008). "Astronomical awe: Flint's Longway Planetarium celebrates 50 years of giving patrons the moon, stars". Flint Journal. MLive Media Group. Retrieved May 22, 2018.

43°1′21″N 83°40′44″W / 43.02250°N 83.67889°W / 43.02250; -83.67889