Architecture Nonprofits Appeal to Supporters as NEA Grants Get Terminated
Over the past several days, inboxes have been flooded with dispatches from architecture and design nonprofits seeking to fill funding gaps left by the termination of federal National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) grants. The dismantling of the NEA follows the gutting of the National Endowment for the Humanities in April. Many of these organizations anticipated—and prepared for—the outright elimination of the NEA as part of the Trump administration’s 2026 budget proposal. Yet making up for the sudden loss of tens of thousands of dollars in grant funding added a new urgency to fundraising activities.
On May 7, Jesse Lazar, executive director of The Center for Architecture, which is operated by the New York chapter of the American Institute of Architects, sent an email to supporters explaining that $30,000 in federal grants, had been canceled by the NEA. The money would have supported hands-on architecture and design initiatives in New York City public schools. “We are not alone in this; hundreds of other organizations, including many of our architecture and design peer organizations in New York, received similar messages [of termination],” Lazar wrote. He goes on to make a direct appeal for support.
One such peer organization is The Architectural League of New York. An email to its “friends and colleagues,” from executive director Jacob R. Moore, shared news that $30,000 in funding for its “Working Communities, Working Architecture” initiative had been yanked.
‘“The reasons given will be familiar to anyone who has been following the news,” writes Moore, “and we are still assessing whether any of the planned funds for the advisors, editors, and event participants from around the country who were being called into action will still be accessible, as well as whether the NEA will continue as a supporter of our work in the future.”
The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF), based in Washington, D.C., managed to find a bit of levity in an otherwise bleak situation with its email. The message that landed in supporters’ inbox on May 7 led with the subject line: “They Dumped Us!” TCLF goes on to explain $30,000 in NEA funding earmarked for the expansion of its What’s Out There Guide to African American Cultural Landscapes had been terminated.
“Losing a $30,000 NEA grant is significant,” the message read. “TCLF honored its commitment by securing the required matching funds, and undertaking the work in earnest, but now, critical arts funding has been stripped/withdrawn. The NEA has supported TCLF’s work repeatedly over the past two decades, through multiple administrations; indeed, they have been a vital partner, which has inspired others to give. But TCLF can no longer count on federal support.”
Among the many other design and architecture nonprofits to have NEA grants cancelled are Open House New York, the Chicago Architecture Center, and MASS Design Group.
Days before Donald Trump was sworn in for his second term, in January, 1,474 grant awards totaling $36.8 million were announced by the NEA for national arts proposals. Termination emails to grant recipients, which began to circulate late last week, explained that grants for proposals that “fell outside [the President’s] new priorities” were being canceled or rescinded and that funding “would be allocated in a new direction.”
The Trump administration’s gutting of the NEA is no doubt devastating for design nonprofits as the grant terminations put vital programs in jeopardy and hobble America’s cultural landscape from coast to coast. But despite the dire tone of the missives sent by architecture nonprofits in recent days, these organizations are determined to—and likely will—persevere. For the time being, though, they’re recalibrating to be more dependent on their supporters’ generosity to continue their work supporting the nation’s artists and designers.