On Saturday, Sept. 19, at the awards ceremony for the Reno Instagrammys, the Holland Project, Reno’s all-ages, nonprofit art and music venue, announced โ€œGrounded for Life,โ€ a new fundraising effort to help the plucky organization buy the building it currently rents. Britt Curtis is the co-founder and director. For more information, or to donate, visit www.hollandreno.org/grounded.

How did this come about?

About a year ago, we found out that our landlord was going to raise our rent pretty significantly when our lease was up. And buying our building has been a long-term goal for Holland always, securing a permanent space. Itโ€™s in our 10-year plan; itโ€™s been the thing weโ€™ve reached for. And so when we found out about this [rent change] a year ago, it jump-started the issue. We werenโ€™t entirely ready to have that conversation, but it made us face it in a really real way. Either we have to secure this space or we have to find whatever space itโ€™s going to be and not do this again. We need to lay down rootsโ€”to protect Holland, and the future of the organization, and not go through the kind of thing that weโ€™ve gone through for the last seven years, which is moving all the time.

How long have you been in that space?

Since November 2011. โ€ฆ It definitely feels like home. That was a big deal for us. We definitely felt a panic like can we find another space like this if weโ€™re forced to move?

What about it do you like?

Holland has a long list of requirements for a space that will work. It has to have an open floor plan. It has to have a space for the gallery and the show space. It has to be all one story so itโ€™s ADA accessible. It has to have proper existing and fire safety stuff. It has to be in a neighborhood without [residential] neighbors. Thereโ€™s this long list of things that we have to check off and that space checks them all off, and there arenโ€™t many that do that, to be honest. And we know because weโ€™ve looked long and far and wide. So we love it. Itโ€™s definitely a DIY space thatโ€™s constantly changing and evolving and getting betterโ€”steps forward, steps backward that kind of thing. But weโ€™ve spent years transforming it, and it definitely feels like home.

Once the decision was made to buy it, what were the hurdles?

It wasnโ€™t really a โ€œletโ€™s do this!โ€ kind of thing. Like everything with Holland, it was really collective, and [it had] to go through intense questioning from everybody. So, the questions at first were, โ€œIs this our space? Do we want to fight for this space? Is this our home? Are there other spaces that could work?โ€ But we were all partial to staying there, so it became, โ€œHow do we make this offer? How do we stay here? How do we make this happen?โ€ So our board and our membership made the decision. So we brought in some of our biggest funding supporters for an informal meeting to just chatโ€”this is where we are, will you be behind us? Can we count you in? And it was really amazing, actuallyโ€”really inspiring, really incredible. It wouldnโ€™t have happened for Holland a few years ago, but in the last seven years, we got to a place where some of our communityโ€™s biggest philanthropists and funding sources believed in us enough to help us pull this off.

Which is how much?

The last 10 percent, which is about $60,000. So that secures Holland and all the necessary upgrades, including a new roof. Anyone whoโ€™s been there and felt roof water leak onto their heads will be excited about that. And new HVACโ€”so, new air conditioning, which everyone has had a comment about, so thatโ€™s probably the thing people are most excited about. New electrical. Necessary upgradesโ€”so the building is all dialed in and ready to go for the next generation and the generation after that.

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