Few not-for-profit organizations can claim to have made a dramatic, permanent, outdoor visual impact on more than 450 city blocks through the five boroughs of New York City. Groundswell has done just that. As part of a continuing series looking at not-for-profits as urban neighbors, The Rooftop Project’s Scott Haggmark and Professor James Hagy visit with Amy Sananman and Sharon Polli at Groundswell’s Brooklyn headquarters.https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/rooftops_project/1006/thumbnail.jp
The Rooftops Project\u27s first national field study of the attitudes and approaches of not-for-prof...
In a recent visit with the Rooftops Project\u27s Alicia Langone and Professor James Hagy, constructi...
What might it be like if your not-for-profit was responsible for projects with occupants consisting ...
Few not-for-profit organizations can claim to have made a dramatic, permanent, outdoor visual impact...
From the very beginning of its new headquarters project, The Bowery Residents’ Committee set out not...
Featuring these New York City not-for-profit institutions: The Art Students League of New York; The ...
In this first article in his series looking at not-for-profits as urban neighbors, Professor James H...
Funding and constructing a new $41 million facility may be a once-in-a-generation, if ever, event, f...
When the California Endowment planned new headquarters space for its own operations, its vision also...
A historic but disused water pumping station, sited between active freeways, became an early and end...
In a conversation with Kelly Padden and Professor James Hagy of The Rooftops Project, Jon Denham and...
Rooftops Project Profile - Human Rights Watch - Every day, not-for-profit organizations face “stay o...
What if you were homeless, a victim of domestic violence, and perhaps were also struggling with phys...
Picture yourself leading a museum tucked into a 21st-century residential neighborhood, housed in a m...
Through a decades-long collaboration with the city and state, not-for-profit tenants occupy office s...
The Rooftops Project\u27s first national field study of the attitudes and approaches of not-for-prof...
In a recent visit with the Rooftops Project\u27s Alicia Langone and Professor James Hagy, constructi...
What might it be like if your not-for-profit was responsible for projects with occupants consisting ...
Few not-for-profit organizations can claim to have made a dramatic, permanent, outdoor visual impact...
From the very beginning of its new headquarters project, The Bowery Residents’ Committee set out not...
Featuring these New York City not-for-profit institutions: The Art Students League of New York; The ...
In this first article in his series looking at not-for-profits as urban neighbors, Professor James H...
Funding and constructing a new $41 million facility may be a once-in-a-generation, if ever, event, f...
When the California Endowment planned new headquarters space for its own operations, its vision also...
A historic but disused water pumping station, sited between active freeways, became an early and end...
In a conversation with Kelly Padden and Professor James Hagy of The Rooftops Project, Jon Denham and...
Rooftops Project Profile - Human Rights Watch - Every day, not-for-profit organizations face “stay o...
What if you were homeless, a victim of domestic violence, and perhaps were also struggling with phys...
Picture yourself leading a museum tucked into a 21st-century residential neighborhood, housed in a m...
Through a decades-long collaboration with the city and state, not-for-profit tenants occupy office s...
The Rooftops Project\u27s first national field study of the attitudes and approaches of not-for-prof...
In a recent visit with the Rooftops Project\u27s Alicia Langone and Professor James Hagy, constructi...
What might it be like if your not-for-profit was responsible for projects with occupants consisting ...