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• n\7 Community & Economic Development <br />1200 County -City Building, 227 West Jefferson, South Bend, Indiana 46601 -1830 Phone 574/235 -9371 Fax 574/235 -9021 <br />To: Redevelopment Commission <br />From: Jeffrey Gibney, Executive Director, Community & Economic <br />Development �Vw- <br />Subject: Hansel Center Update / Additional Funding Request <br />Date: June 28, 2011 <br />On March 20, 2009, the Commission approved the use of $130,000 in CDBG and $370,000 in West <br />Washington Chapin Development Area (WWCDA) funds, to be put toward the rehabilitation of the <br />Hansel Center, 1045 W. Washington Street. This rehabilitation will be a joint project with the <br />University of Notre Dame, South Bend Heritage Foundation, and the City of South Bend, with the <br />property ultimately being transferred to the University and becoming the Notre Dame Center for Arts <br />and Culture (Center). <br />This facility will strengthen the community by celebrating cultural diversity through its provision of <br />a common and accessible space for community programming, art, and education. The Center will <br />provide a gathering place for the West Side community through its class and meeting rooms, gallery, <br />and outdoor spaces. It is foreseen this Center will have a national and international reach, which will <br />ultimately attract resources from outside the area and further strengthen the local community. <br />The Center and its programs will enhance the vitality of South Bend's West Side, by joining in <br />partnership with neighboring institutions: The Center for History, Studebaker National Museum, <br />Indiana University Civil Rights Heritage Center at the Natatorium, and the Salvation Army Kroc <br />Center, all located in the historic West Washington district. <br />The center piece of the Center is the relocation of the internationally renowned fine -art print studio <br />Segura Publishing, from Tempe, Arizona. This relocation will provide an unprecedented opportunity <br />to enhance the art and legacy of printmaking in the United States. Segura's continuous history of <br />working with community on all levels of art education will anchor and shape a significant amount of <br />community programming, and will make the Center a nationally prominent print program with a <br />strong focus on Latino and African American art, and Catholic religious iconography. <br />A visiting artists -in- residency program will be established, with numerous opportunities being <br />available for local artists and youth to participate in the printmaking workshops and programs. The <br />Center will also provide much needed permanent space for a writer -in- residence initiative of Notre <br />What We Do Today Makes A ONYbromm t <br />