Join Storefront’s Advisory Council: Nomination form now open

Storefront for Community Design’s Advisory Council is a group of enthusiastic community members who are passionate about community voice, equitable design, and collaborative partnerships. This is a newly forming group that will supplement the Storefront team and board’s skills and help advocate for Storefront’s mission. The Advisory Council is also a great steppingstone for non-profit board service.

The nomination form is now open for the Advisory Council and will close on May 27, 2022 at 12:00pm. Review of applications and selection of members will take place in June. The first meeting will take place in July.

The Advisory Council’s purpose:

  • Provide technical expertise or advice in areas such as youth education, design education, architecture and planning, finance, fundraising, community building, event planning, advocacy, etc.

  • Help to spearhead and/or fundraise for a special project or event

  • Provide an independent sounding board for the Board of Directors

  • Serve as an advocate for the organization


The Advisory Council will include up to eight (8) community members and will meet quarterly (min. 4 times per year; 2 hr. meetings). Members of the Advisory Council are also encouraged to attend board meetings or join a committee if interested. Committees include communications, finance, development, and programs. If you have questions, contact us.

10 | A Vision for the Future

[10 Years, 10 Stories of Impact series]

From the first impact story that celebrated Storefront’s founding to the last story that detailed a community driven design process, it is evident that Storefront for Community Design’s impact has been witnessed across the City of Richmond. In ten years, our programming has grown from a single design assistance program at a neighborhood level to multiple programs at a city-wide level.

In 2021, Storefront announced the selection of our new Executive Director making this an ideal moment to reflect upon the progress we’ve made and establish a vision moving forward that adapts to the changing landscape of our communities. Over the past six months, we’ve been writing a strategic plan that will be our roadmap through 2025 and we are excited to launch this spring. As we turn our attention to the next 10 years, we asked founding members of Storefront for Community Design and VCUarts mOb studio three questions to highlight past achievements and share their vision for the future of our programming.

Save the Date for #storefrontcelebrates

We’re throwing a party and YOU are invited!

There will be food, music (inside and out), other First Friday happenings, and of course—let there be cake! Mark your calendar, you don't want to miss it. Do your friends a favor and share the invitation using #storefrontcelebrates so they can be part of the fun.

Join us for the festivities on May 6 from 5:30-9:00pm at 205 E. Broad Street.

SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES

Thank you to our current 10th Anniversary sponsors! Your sponsorship is making a difference in our community. There's still time to become a sponsor. Click below for sponsorship benefits and opportunities.

09 | Community Driven Design Process

[10 Years, 10 Stories of Impact series]

A community driven design process aims to create a NetZero hub for the Highland Park Community through Re-Imagining Benefield.

The WHY

In early 2018, Ryan Rinn, then Executive Director of Storefront for Community Design and Nick Cooper, then Director of Citizen HKS, sat down to talk about how two organizations could come together and support a Richmond community in need. Ryan quickly guided the conversation to an under-served community north of the city of Richmond that Storefront had been invested in for years but needed a substantial project and process to continue to empower the youth and serve as a catalyst for change and hope. Re-Imagining Benefield was born.

Recapping Our Fall City Builders Design Workshop; Spring Registration Now Open

Did you know that a well-designed place enhances your health? 

Storefront for Community Design is excited to launch our City Builders Design Workshop this spring. We are seeking youth and young adults ages 13 -18 who are inspired by real world projects that make positive change in their neighborhoods. Come research, discover, and design resources with us this spring!  

Are you inspired by design and creativity? 

Are you passionate about health and wellness?

Are you interested in innovative ways to create change in your community?

Become A City Builder!

Want to learn more about Storefront’s Design Education?


Learn more about our Fall ‘21 Session on Food Access

When the pandemic began, Storefront for Community Design and community partners at Six Points Innovation Center (6PIC) pivoted programming to virtual school and distributing and delivering food to it’s youth residents in the City of Richmond. Due to public school closures many students were learning virtually from home which also meant youth were eating at home rather than at school. Storefront partnered with Richmond Public Schools to make 6PIC a hub for families to make it more accessible for our youth and their families to receive pertinent school information and resources. During this time many families and youth became more aware of the limited access to healthy food in the city.

In September of 2021, schools reopened and not even a month after … Richmond we have a problem. Parents expressed their concerns about the school meals being provided to their students. The Richmond Times Dispatch reported that parents weren’t happy with the meals provided to their students and petitioned the school board to find out what was going on. At the same time our Youth Innovation Director, Kai Banks, was preparing to restart the City Builders Design program, heard the concerns from teachers and parents and thought, “what about our students?”

I wanted to know what our students were experiencing, teach them more about how the school and food system worked, and empower them to think creatively and design solutions. Fresh off of working in the community around food access concerns in general it seemed only right to focus our attention on food access in our community.
— Kai Banks, Youth Innovation Director

Residential Security Map, Visit To City Hall’s Observatory Deck

With Kai’s knowledge of the history of Richmond and redlining, she understood the results that it had created, food deserts. According to the Richmond 300 insights report, food deserts are areas in which there is a lack of fresh and healthy food options within a reasonable, convenient distance. Normally, these food deserts are full of fast food restaurants and convenience-type stores but are lacking grocery stores or supermarkets. Some typical methods traditionally used to try and eliminate these deserts are: improvements to the business climate, more participation in WIC(Women, Infants, and Children) or SNAP(Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) programs, increased public transit in order to take people to the food, increased education about healthy food choices in public schools, and partnering with nonprofits to affect policy change at a state or federal level.

The City Builders Design program is designed to teach youth residents about urban planning and design. It is used to educate them on how cities work and plan for the future, while looking at historical events that created the conditions that cities are today. At the end of the program, youth work together to design a solution to the challenges that they feel is impacting their communities. 

Breathing Places Exhibit At The Valentine Museum

The semester began in October with an observation and discovery period. During this period students conducted a community planning analysis for the Northside, visited urban gardens and food locations in the area, and surveyed community members. Their findings revealed that 3 out 5 students did not have access to transportation. They also discovered that there weren’t any major grocery stores within a 5 mile radius of 6PIC. The students also discussed school lunches and their own likes and dislikes.

The second half of the semester students learned from experts in their prospective fields around land use, policy, and urban planning. The speakers ranged from Ebony Walden, an urban planner, Richmond Food Justice Alliance, a community organization, and Maggie Walker Community Land Trust, a housing non-profit in the city. City Builders’ participants went on a field trip to the Valentine Museum and City Hall observation deck to learn more about the historical context of green spaces and other development in the city of Richmond. Lastly, the students had an opportunity to visit VCUart’s mOb studio students and engage in the design process.

City Builders Design Concept for Northside Healthy Food Map


In the final weeks, City Builders’ participants collaborated with a design professional to create a vision for a North Side food access map for residents to be able to locate urban gardens, smaller markets/stores that provided healthy food access, and community pantries in the area. By the end of the semester they learned that the school's meal selection had some to do with nutrition and a lot to do with policies on the state level. One of the students even expressed she was ready to speak with the Virginia Department of Education to advocate for meals in schools!

Are you a designer interested in helping our City Builders create a final version of their map? Please feel free to email hello@storefrontrichmond.org.

About City Builders Design Workshop
The vision of the City Builders program is to engage the next generation of designers and grow urban youth leaders and equip youth for career success, civic engagement, and creative expression. The program focuses on real world projects in the built environment and encourages youth ages 13-18 to research, discover, and design resources for community members across Richmond. City Builders advances civic power through place-making projects and neighborhood-based skill building in program areas.




Notes from the Field: February Program Highlights

Notes from the Field: February Program Highlights

Storefront for Community Design operates three main community-based studio programs: Youth Innovation, Design Session, and Community Engagement. Check out our latest highlights for each studio below. If you’re interested in getting involved, check out our summer volunteer opportunities.

Youth Innovation Studio

The Youth Innovation Studio provides project-based learning opportunities that engage youth and young adults in real-world problem solving while providing a safe space to build the capacity to create effective change in their lives and communities.


Fall Session

Tis the season to be thankful. Thank you to all of our generous donors for assisting us in reaching our September fundraising goal for our Youth Innovation Studio! Thanks to you, we were able to kickstart our programming this fall.

The City Builders design program launched in October with a focus on creating solutions for healthy food access in the city. We have begun our education and discovery phase to learn more about the challenges of the community.

In October, we welcomed Ebony Walden, Urban Planner, Consultant, and Creator of the Racial Equity Essay project. During her visit, the youth participants had the opportunity to learn about the history of urban planning in Richmond and completed a community planning analysis to identify the needs of the Highland Park community. Later this semester, they will be digging deeper into the challenges of food accessibility for residents in Richmond as we learned that five out of five residents surveyed did not have access to a grocery store within walking distance. Of the five residents interviewed, only one had access to a car.

08 | General Demotion / General Devotion

[10 Years, 10 Stories of Impact series]

Richmond’s Monument Avenue has been a showpiece of our city’s ambitions since its inception, and a source of controversy for just as long. Designed during the City Beautiful era, its wide boulevard, grassy median, and grand architecture reflect the principles of urban city planning aesthetics, while also celebrating the Lost Cause narrative that fit hand-in-glove with the overt racism of the Jim Crow era. Since then, Monument Avenue has remained a target of strong feelings and, for better or worse, a defining symbol of our city.

Storefront for Community Design began programming efforts focused on Monument Avenue in 2015, following the racially motivated shooting at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, SC. Storefront, in partnership with VCUart’s middle Of Broad (“mOb”) studio, sponsored a design education program and panel featuring Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Michael Paul Williams, architectural historian Calder Loth, and Bill Martin, Director of the Valentine.

The issue gained renewed urgency in the summer of 2017, in the wake of the violence of the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville. Storefront, once again in partnership with VCUart’s mOb Studio, decided to take a different approach by engaging not just local Richmonders, but the design community at large to reimagine Monument Avenue.

Storefront proposed a juried design competition, coined “General Demotion/General Devotion”, intended to facilitate constructive discussion about the future of Monument Avenue and guided by the principle that "good design has the power to offer nuanced, multi-layered and hybridized representation of the built environment in places where conventional discussion has failed."

Spring 2022 Volunteer Opportunities

Storefront provides ongoing volunteer opportunities in our low-cost design and planning assistance programs and design education programs. We are seeking residents and professionals who are passionate about community voice, equitable design, and collaborative partnerships. Check out our upcoming volunteer opportunities below.

  1. Design Education - City Builders Design: Help us develop the design education curriculum and/or participate in our spring youth semester program.

  2. Community Engagement and Events: Become liaisons for engagement initiatives and/or help us plan our 10th Anniversary community celebration.

  3. Design Session: Provide one-on-one advice, conceptual sketches, and plans of actions throughout the year.

See below for more information. We are looking for volunteers with varying interests and expertise, so don’t be bashful to get involved! If you are interested in volunteering, be sure to complete the form specific to each opportunity by January 27, 2022. If you have any questions, please email hello@storefrontrichmond.org. We look forward to hearing from you!

Five Ways to Get Involved in 2022

This year has been a big one! We brought on new team members, rebooted programming, and began building our roadmap for the future. We are extremely grateful for what we have accomplished with our small team, Board of Directors, and community partners. Thank you for helping Storefront for Community Design connect community members to design tools and resources and engage the next generation of designers.

We've got big things in store for 2022! Until then, enjoy your holiday season and consider supporting Storefront in the new year through the following opportunities.

07 | Building a Brave Space

[10 Years, 10 Stories of Impact series]

How it Happened

This is the question owner Kelli Lemon found herself asking in 2017 when looking for ways to take her dream of opening a café and make it real. Through a few fateful conversations and connections, Kelli was introduced to Ryan Rinn, Storefront for Community Design’s past Executive Director. Kelli later applied for Design Session, Storefront’s one-on-one low-cost design and planning assistance program. We were able to walk Kelli through a conceptual design study that ultimately helped take her passion and vision and bring it to life.