Talent
Attract and keep talented people. Cities are stronger for everyone when they can attract and keep talented people. People, both younger and older, are returning to cities in record numbers, looking for the best of city life.
We want the most innovative and effective ideas and a plan to realize them. Ideas should focus on one or all of three key drivers of city success.
TALENT: Ideas that help cities attract and keep talented people.
OPPORTUNITY: Ideas that expand economic prospects by breaking down divides and making new connections.
ENGAGEMENT: Ideas that spur connection and civic involvement.
Attract and keep talented people. Cities are stronger for everyone when they can attract and keep talented people. People, both younger and older, are returning to cities in record numbers, looking for the best of city life.
Recipient: MidTown Inc.
City: Columbus, Georgia
Award: $199,195
Aim: Establishing a comprehensive network of bicycle and pedestrian connections among the entertainment and business district of Uptown and the 24 diverse neighborhoods of MidTown.
Recipient: Chris Horne
City: Akron, Ohio
Award: $52,168
Aim: Fostering a stronger connection to the city by creating a subscription service that celebrates Akron with a monthly selection of local goods and experiences delivered in a box.
Expand economic prospects by breaking down divides and making new connections. To succeed, cities need to create places where people of diverse backgrounds and income levels can connect. They need to help workers connect with and flourish in today’s mobile and digital economy.
Recipient: Little Giant Creative
City: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Award: $308,640
Aim: Increasing economic opportunity by using hip-hop to provide hands-on business training to members of low-income groups.
Recipient: Group Melvin Design
City: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Award: $297,000
Aim: Introducing fun, easy solutions at city pools, which will be designed to make them more vibrant places to meet and interact with neighbors and friends.
Spur connection and civic involvement. Cities need spaces and programming that enable people to come together and help shape their city’s future. Engaged citizens are helping set the agenda for change in their city and connecting with their community to take concrete, collective action.
Recipient: Here’s My Chance
City: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Award: $166,394
Aim: Making voting in local elections more enticing by creating new types of signs at polling places and commissioning artists to perform site-specific pieces on election days.
Recipient: University of St. Thomas
City: St. Paul, Minnesota
Award: $170,275
Aim: Testing a new way to increase participation in local elections by distributing stickers that read “I'm Going to Vote Today” to eligible voters to wear on Election Day.
The Knight Cities Challenge welcomes anyone with big ideas and the ability to realize them. Activists, designers, artists, planning professionals, hackers, architects, city officials, educators, nonprofits, entrepreneurs, block captains, social workers—everyone is welcome. The only rule is your project needs to benefit one of the Knight communities.
HOW IT WORKSApplications currently closed.
Knight Foundation is a national foundation with strong local roots. We invest in journalism, in the arts, and in the success of cities where brothers John S. and James L. Knight once published newspapers. Our goal is to foster informed and engaged communities, which we believe are essential for a healthy democracy.