in the Netherlands is based on a former iron foundry. The main building was used once for the administration. The community centres typically have their own origin and history. There are some examples: • Purpose-built - Buildings have been erected specifically to function as community centers (as early as 1880, perhaps even earlier). • A disused public building - When an official government building (such as a school or city hall) is no longer needed for its original purpose, it is sometimes offered to the community as gift, loan or sale. • A disused commercial building - When a commercial building of some local importance is no longer used, it is sometimes sold or donated to the community. • A building that served many of the purposes now given to the community centre in addition to a different primary use (such as school, church, inn, or town hall), which was later acquired so it could continue these functions after its primary use subsided.
Schools Early forms of community centers in the
United States were based in
schools providing facilities to
inner city communities out of school hours. An early celebrated example of this is to be found in
Rochester,
New York from 1907.
Edward J. Ward, a
Presbyterian minister, joined the Extension Department at the
University of Wisconsin–Madison, organizing the
Wisconsin Bureau of Civic and Social Development. By 1911 they organized a country-wide conference on schools as social centers. Despite concerns expressed by politicians and public officials that they might provide a focus for alternative political and social activity, the idea was successful. In 1916, with the foundation of the National Community Center Association, the term
Community Center was generally used in the US. By 1918 there were community centers in 107 US cities, and in 240 cities by 1924. By 1930 there were nearly 500 centers with more than four million people regularly attending. The first of these was Public School 63, located on the
Lower East Side.
Clinton Child's, one of the organizers, described it as: :"
A Community organized about some center for its own political and social welfare and expression; to peer into its own mind and life, to discover its own social needs and then to meet them, whether they concern the political field, the field of health, of recreation, of education, or of industry; such community organization is necessary if democratic society is to succeed and endure". In the UK many villages and towns have their own community centre, although nearby schools may offer their assembly or dining hall after school for Community Centre activities. For example, local schools near
Ouston, County Durham may host dance or sporting activities provided by a local community centre. ==Grassroot functions==