Detroit In the early 2000s, together with the City of Detroit and General Motors, the Kresge Foundation formed the Detroit Riverfront Conservancy as a nonprofit to build and operate the Detroit riverfront. The Kresge Foundation gave a challenge grant of $50 million to the conservancy which was, at the time, the largest grant awarded by the foundation. Over the following two decades, the conservancy has restored and built out 3.5 miles (5.6 km) of River Walk along the
Detroit International Riverfront between
Belle Isle and
Joe Louis Arena, later to be extended to the
Ambassador Bridge. Since the late 2000s, the Kresge Foundation has awarded more than $6 million to more than 250 artists through the awards and fellowships in its Kresge Arts in Detroit program. In 2015, the foundation added the Gilda Awards, named after
Gilda Snowden, to recognize emerging artists in Detroit. In 2010, the foundation invested $35 million into the M-1 Rail (now
QLine) project to build of
streetcar service from
Downtown Detroit through
Midtown to
New Center. In total, the foundation contributed $50 million to the streetcar project which opened in May 2017 at a total cost of $187 million. A gift from the foundation also allowed free rides on the QLine until early September of that year and at various periods in subsequent years. In January 2013, the foundation pledged $150 million to aid in the implementation of a long-ranging, comprehensive framework for Detroit's future, also known as The
Detroit Future City plan. That year, the foundation's Board of Trustees approved 316 awards totaling $122 million; $128 million was paid out to grantees over the course of the year. Kresge's Social Investment Practice made another $17.7 million available to organizations whose efforts support foundation goals through program-related investments. The foundation also played a major part in organizing the "grand bargain" to rescue the city of Detroit from
bankruptcy in 2013. Kresge contributed $100 million of the $370 million raised to improve the city's finances. Kresge's CEO Rapson was in large part responsible for organizing several organizations that came together to raise the funds necessary for the plan. The organization started Kresge Innovative Projects: Detroit (KIPD) in 2015 with a $5-million pilot program to award small grants to restore neighborhoods in Detroit. The program was relaunched in 2018 with $6 million in additional funds. As of August 2020, the program awarded grants to 127 projects in neighborhoods around the city.
National From 2015 to 2020, the Kresge Foundation awarded more than $8.4 million in grants to developments through its FreshLo program which stands for "Fresh, Local & Equitable Initiative". The program awards grants to development projects around the United States that are food-focused in areas that lack access to fresh foods. In November 2020, the foundation set aside $30 million over three years for nearly 60 organizations focused on racial justice in Detroit, Memphis,
Fresno, and
New Orleans as well as national civil-rights organizations. Among these were 20 organizations in Detroit that received a total of $8 million. The Kresge Foundation made a number of financial contributions to help with the response to the
COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, the foundation committed $19 million to help nonprofit organizations weather the pandemic. In Detroit, the foundation committed $2 million to back loans from the
Paycheck Protection Program to nonprofits organizations. In March 2021, the foundation also backed a $5-million loan to a Detroit housing agency, United Community Housing Coalition, with $4.5 million guarantee as the agency waited for federal funds from the U.S. Congress to make their way through legislative hurdles. In April, Kresge announced that it would contribute $4.4 million, including $2 million in Detroit, to help with the distribution of
COVID-19 vaccines. Kresge's education program awards more than $10 million in grants to organizations focused on
higher education. The foundation favors programs directed at low income students, "especially those living in cities, and underrepresented racial and ethnic groups, including first-generation students; Black, Indigenous, and people of color; veterans; and immigrant students". The education program is focused geographically in Michigan, Florida, California and Texas, and cities such as Detroit, Memphis and New Orleans. The Kresge Foundation also works in one country outside of the United States. The foundation funds and promote South African postsecondary access and success. With the intention of improving student graduation rates.In 2025, the foundation supported The Price of Excellence, a short documentary produced by
The Century Foundation and directed by JD Jones examining the historical underfunding of
HBCUs relative to peer institutions. The film was filmed at
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and premiered at the
Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's Annual Legislative Conference on September 25, 2025. In 2021, the foundation issued a loan guarantee of $4.5 million to the fund for the
Memphis Medical District to improve housing and commercial spaces in the neighborhood which has a high poverty rate and a concentration of medical facilities. == References ==