We work in collaboration with thousands of local partners and grassroots leaders across the nation who share our commitment to advancing shared prosperity, creating resilient economies, and improving quality of life.
Made up of small towns, mid-sized communities, and urban commercial districts, the thousands of organizations, individuals, volunteers, and local leaders that make up Main Street America™ represent the broad diversity that makes this country so unique.
Looking for strategies and tools to support you in your work? Delve into the Main Street Resource Center and explore a wide range of resources including our extensive Knowledge Hub, professional development opportunities, field service offerings, advocacy support, and more!
Join us in our work to advance shared prosperity, create strong economies, and improve quality of life in downtowns and neighborhood commercial districts.
Main Spotlight: Exploring the 2023 Summer Intern Projects
This summer, Main Street America was fortunate to work with three wonderful interns. Majd Alsaif joined the Research team as the Downtown Buildings and Vacancy Intern, Leilani Commons served as the Government Relations Intern, and Celeste Constancio joined the Communications department as the Digital Marketing Intern. We are excited to share the results of their projects.
Majd Alsaif, Downtown Buildings and Vacancy Intern
Vacant and underutilized buildings have huge potential to be reused and reinvigorate downtowns and local economies, but without a structured and holistic understanding of how vacancy appears in a community, it is difficult to address the challenge and implement solutions. Majd worked with the Research team to help create a tool that Main Street communities can use to collect and record this data as easily and efficiently as possible.
The tool combines an easy mobile survey interface and dashboard view, with the idea that each community can survey their entire Main Street to see what the rate of key characteristics like vacancy, disrepair, and historic significance looks like in their district. To test their tool, they set up a pilot project with eight Main Street programs from across the network. Participants completed a 16-question survey of all the properties in their district. The pilot resulted in a huge range of feedback on data types, user experiences, and new use cases.
“Speaking directly with community leaders was truly the highlight of this experience,” said Majd. “Being able to talk through the issues they have had in addressing challenges and problem-solving alongside them to find a solution allowed me to see how one idea could evolve into so many possibilities. With the roll-out of the final inventory tool early next year, I'm eager to see how this tool will be used by all the different programs across the country.”
Leilani Commons, Government Relations Intern
The Main Street America network is comprised of a system of local districts and Coordinating Program partners. In 41 states, four large cities, and one county, Main Street Coordinating Programs provide essential resources, technical assistance, training, and capacity building activities to strengthen the ability of local programs to cultivate revitalization programs and projects. Leilani’s summer internship provided an opportunity to review recent surveys of MSA’s Coordinating Program network, analyze trends, and review existing materials across the website and materials.
Leilani’s work will form the basis of a new report aimed at helping current and emerging Coordinating Programs to communicate with decision-makers about the value of Coordinating Programs as a policy solution to commercial corridor disinvestment. The report will include information to help decision-makers understand how current Coordinating Programs are structured either as public agencies or public-private nonprofit organizations, aiding in establishing new Coordinating Programs and expanding those that are currently under-resourced.
Celeste Constancio, Digital Marketing Intern
Digital marketing is a crucial tool that Main Street America uses to share resources and highlight success stories from across the network. Celeste’s internship focused on creating engaging and informative content for our social media channels, including YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn. She undertook two major video series projects as well as creating a myriad of other posts and digital assets.
Her debut series was Meet the Interns, a three-part video series introducing each of the summer interns to our social media audiences. Celeste was responsible for planning the series, interviewing the interns, and editing the clips into videos tailored for multiple channels. The second series Celeste produced was the Black Business Month Series. For this series, she identified Black-owned businesses in Main Street communities, worked with the business owners and local Main Street staff to collect interview footage, and compiled the footage into polished final videos.
Celeste also helped us with our continuing effort to sort and archive digital media assets for future use in our multimedia database. Her work will ensure that we have high-quality photos and videos to use in blogs and future promotional materials.
“Working within an established brand was eye-opening and learning from my supervisors and receiving feedback was rewarding,” said Celeste of her internship experience. “My experience being an intern with Main Street America was nothing short of a great learning experience. The knowledge I’ve gained and my experiences with Main Street America have helped set the foundation for digital marketing that I was striving to build.”
Hestia Creations, a Main Street America Allied Member, is this quarter's Main Spotlight advertiser. For more information about the products and services they provide to Main Street organizations, click here >
Urban Impact Inc., harnesses strategic investments and collaborative efforts to foster a vibrant and sustainable future, from visionary adaptive reuse ventures to transformative development grants for small businesses and property owners in Birmingham, Alabama's historic 4th Avenue Black Business District.
We are excited to announce the Building Opportunities on Main Street (BOOMS) Tracker, a new free tool to help designated Main Streets unlock the potential of their vacant properties. This user-friendly property inventory tool allows local leaders can gather, store, and showcase information about their district’s built environment to plan and advocate for new property uses.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced $20B in federal Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund (GGRF) awards distributed to eight national non-profit consortiums. Main Street America looks forward to partnership and engagement with awardees and local programs to identify projects and expand impact throughout our network.
Middlesboro Main Street in Middlesboro, Ky., Puerto Rican Cultural Center in Chicago, Ill., and Sugar Creek Business Association in Charlotte, N.C., have each been awarded $100,000 through The Hartford Small Business Accelerator Grant Program in partnership with Main Street America.
Learn how the National Clean Investment Fund (NCIF) and the Clean Communities Accelerator Fund (CCIA) will pump billions of dollars into reducing carbon emissions from the built environment in the coming years.
Main Street America is leading a coalition urging that the EPA make available the GGRF funds for adaptive reuse and location-efficient projects because of the substantial greenhouse gas emissions reduction offered by such developments.
From 19th-century mill girls to Maine's mill redevelopments and the regional manufacturers of tomorrow, learn about the amazing history and promise of the New England mill.
A practical and easily digestible report containing practical “how-to’s” designed to help local leaders support housing development in their communities.
Main Street America's research team takes a look at the data presented in the At Home on Main Street and offers relevant insights for Main Street managers looking to understand downtown and neighborhood commercial district housing trends.
In Fall 2022, MSA partnered with infill developer and small-deal guru Jim Heid and the Incremental Development Alliance to conduct surveys on the barriers to small-scale real estate projects across the United States. Here we share the results.
This article was published on January 10, 2023, by Next City, a nonprofit news organization focused on socially, economically, and environmentally sustainable urban practices.
Interested in implementing a small-scale development project in your district? Mike Scholl of Ayres Associates, who worked with Downtown Laramie Wyoming on their Empress Lofts project, lays out some of the key considerations for Main Streets working on development projects.
Main Street America launches a project to learn more about the specific barriers to small-scale real estate development on our Main Streets and identify solutions for financing small-scale deals.
learn how Rethos: Places Reimagined is encouraging upper-floor development through their program funded by the Paul Bruhn Historic Revitalization Grant Program.
California communities to share their latest developments, including innovative initiatives, once-in-a-lifetime opportunities, and profoundly place- and people-based projects.
Leverage NC, a partnership between North Carolina Main Street and the North Carolina League of Municipalities, hosted a four-part webinar series titled Better Community Planning & Economic Development led by Ed McMahon, Chair Emeritus of Main Street America and a leading national authority on land use policy and economic development.
In contrast, the Main Street Program in Laramie, Wyoming, is thriving, having successfully cultivated millions of dollars to help fill these vacant, blighted spaces with permanent structures.
In 2016, the North Carolina Main Street & Rural Planning Center partnered with the University of North Carolina at Greensboro’s Department of Interior Architecture (UNCG) to provide design assistance to Main Street communities.