Community Investment

Bridging Resources to Neighborhood Vision

At the Center for Neighborhoods, investment is more than funding, it’s a tool to turn community vision into tangible change. We support residents and neighborhood organizations through planning, project development, financing strategies, and implementation assistance, while serving as a bridge between communities and developers, government, philanthropy, and other capital partners. By aligning resources with grassroots priorities, CFN helps neighborhoods access the support they need to shape their own futures, build momentum, and drive lasting transformation.

PRoject DEvelopment

How we Support investment

Turning community vision into fundable projects

When communities are ready to move from ideas to implementation, we walk alongside them. We mobilize capital, partnerships, and practical support to turn community-led ideas into transformative projects. As more of our work advances community ownership, we are helping residents and local leaders not only shape what gets built, but build pathways to own, govern, and benefit from it over time.


Through our expertise, strategic partnerships, and sponsorship of community ownership vehicles, we help communities secure the resources, structure, and momentum needed to bring bold ideas to life. We believe the strongest projects are not simply done for communities, but built with them—and increasingly, owned by them.


Join us in creating projects that are not only impactful, but rooted in local leadership, shared benefit, and long-term community wealth.
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Financing strategies And implementation assistance

How we Support Investment

Connecting neighbors to the capital they need

Beyond project planning, CFN helps neighborhoods access the funding and resources needed to make ideas a reality. We provide guidance on financing strategies, identify potential partners across government, philanthropy, and private investment, and offer hands-on implementation support to ensure projects succeed. This dual approach ensures communities don’t just plan, they execute creating measurable impact and sustainable transformation.


Need help securing funding or implementing a project?

Reach out to see how our investment support can accelerate your neighborhood’s goals.


Creating Community, One Neighborhood at a Time.

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investment in action

From harm to ownership in park hill/algonquin

“Small wins” that add up

beechmont neighborhood grafitti art in Louisville, KY

The Triangle property in Park Hill/Algonquin shows what’s possible when communities lead and capital follows.


When residents identified a serious quality-of-life threat, dumpsters planned just outside the windows of a public housing complex, they didn’t just push back. They organized, defined a better outcome, and partnered with CFN to secure control of the land itself. CFN stepped in with the deal capacity neighborhoods rarely have access to, acquiring the property as a bridge to resident-led ownership.


Backed by timely support from the Community Foundation of Louisville, CFN is holding the site until it transfers to Rising Roots Collective, a planned resident-led cooperative. This isn’t just a real estate transaction, it’s a shift in who controls land, value, and future outcomes. The Triangle flips the traditional development model on its head: residents identify the need, CFN structures the opportunity, partners provide capital, and the community owns the asset. It’s a repeatable approach to investment that prevents harm, builds wealth locally, and proves that neighborhoods can, and should, own the ground beneath their feet.


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Center for Neighborhoods -  Theory of change

Our long-established Theory of Change recognizes that sustainable neighborhood transformation follows a deliberate progression: Engagement → Education → Planning → Investment. Together, this sequence creates more than individual projects. It builds neighborhood capacity, grows long-term civic leadership, and shapes the policy and investment environment so communities can continue to direct their own futures—again and again.

  • Education

    We equip neighbors with the knowledge and skills to navigate civic systems, organize collectively, and lead effectively. Through applied learning and shared experience, residents gain the tools to move from participation to leadership.

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  • Engagement

    We begin by building trust and relationships with neighbors, meeting people where they are and listening first. Through authentic engagement, residents identify priorities, build confidence, and take the first steps toward shaping what happens in their communities.

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  • Planning

    We support neighborhoods in translating their ideas into clear, community-owned visions and actionable strategies. By centering residents and grounding plans in data and feasibility, we help ensure planning leads to real decisions and lasting impact.

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  • Investment

    We connect communities to the capital, partners, and implementation support needed to bring plans to life. By aligning investment with neighborhood priorities, we help shift power, keep value local, and create pathways for long-term transformation.

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By carlad March 8, 2026
Louisville has a rare opportunity right now: to move a major community asset from uncertainty to permanence. For years, the Nia Center has represented something bigger than square footage: a visible, West End hub where small businesses and community-serving organizations can grow side by side. What makes this moment different is that the work has shifted from “wouldn’t it be great” to the close-ready realities that actually determine outcomes—finalizing deal structure, aligning the capital stack, and putting the documentation in place so the project can close, stabilize, and deliver. As the fiscal sponsor supporting the West Louisville Dream Team, we’re in the process of submitting final materials to a host of potential funders and investors needed to complete the acquisition, including, importantly, a request to the West End Opportunity Partnership (see details below). Funding is the unlock at this point. The overall raise is $4,000,000 to acquire, close, and begin revitalization of the Nia Center. The financing process now runs on dates: proof of financing is due April 3, 2026 , with a targeted closing window in late May / early June 2026 . The request to the West End Opportunity Partnership, in plain terms As part of completing the $4.0 million raise, we, as fiscal sponsor and applicant on behalf of the West Louisville Dream Team (WLDT) and the community ownership offering it is preparing, is requesting $1,950,000 from The Partnership. That request has two parts: $1,500,000 as preferred redeemable equity and $450,000 as a grant for building improvements and upgrades. The $1.5 million earns a 4% annual return with liquidation preference ahead of common equity, meaning it has stronger protection than the common shares that will be held by CFN on behalf of WLDT and the community during the term of the fiscal sponsorship. WLDT/CFN can start paying it back after three years, and if it hasn’t been repaid by ten years, The Partnership can require repayment. There’s no extra penalty for paying it back early. At a future refinance or sale, The Partnership also has an option to convert a portion into up to 5% ownership instead of taking all cash back. If The Partnership prefers, part of this $1.5 million can be structured as a subordinated loan, at interest of 4% and a balloon payment in 15 years. The $450,000 grant goes directly toward the building improvements and upgrades that have been planned for the building to improve the tenant experience and protect long-term value. It also serves as an anchor within a broader $1,000,000 upgrades grant campaign, helping accelerate visible improvements while the building moves into its next chapter. What happens next The next phase is disciplined and time-bound: finish financing commitments, continue tenant engagement and pre-leasing progress, and complete closing preparations so the project can move into early upgrades and stabilized operations. If we do this right, the Nia Center becomes a proof point—showing what it looks like when community leadership and structured capital work together to produce something durable: a stronger hub for Black, Brown and local entrepreneurship, and an ownership pathway that isn’t theoretical, but real enough to close on. This is the Nia Center moment. The work now is to turn community voice and values into execution, and long-term community ownership.
A large ornate bronze fountain with water cascading into a pool, surrounded by a wrought-iron fence and greenery.
By Center for Neighborhoods March 2, 2026
CFN has evolved from a design center doing primarily human-centered architecture work into an organization focused on education, engagement, and resident leadership—training and programs that help neighbors define priorities and build power together.
Woman in blazer at a desk, writing in a notebook, with laptop, blueprints, and phone; office setting.
By Center for Neighborhoods February 21, 2026
Louisville doesn’t need more ideas. It needs more capacity to execute—in neighborhoods, with residents, and in ways that actually last. That’s why Center for Neighborhoods is building a citywide Expert Network of experienced planners, facilitators, designers, organizers, analysts, developers, and project leaders.

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The men and women of Path's team are passionate about our church and providing members with everything they could possibly need.