Alaska Public Media © 2025. All rights reserved.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Sealaska Heritage secures federal grant for downtown arts campus

Downtown Juneau. (Creative Commons photo by Lena LeRay)
Downtown Juneau. (Creative Commons photo by Lena LeRay)

Sealaska Heritage Institute  announced Wednesday that it will receive a federal grant for $5.6 million to build out its vision for an arts campus in downtown Juneau.

The cultural nonprofit estimates the project will cost $12 million and hopes to break ground in June 2020, during  Celebration. It would turn the parking lot at the corner of Front and Seward streets into a plaza, connecting new buildings with the regional Native corporation’s headquarters and the institute’s Walter Soboleff Building.

“We are thrilled to officially kick off the fundraising campaign for our arts campus, which is a major component of our vision to make Juneau the Northwest Coast arts capital of the world,” SHI President Rosita Worl said in a press release. “Our campus will be a major step toward perpetuating Alaska’s Native arts for Native Peoples’ personal and ceremonial use as well as for the general public.”

The new buildings are intended to house classrooms for art instruction, an art library and space for artists-in-residence.

The announcement says parking that serves the Sealaska Corp.’s headquarters will move underground.

Juneau city officials named the Front and Seward street intersection Heritage Square last year amid an artistic redesign. The campus project is part of an institute goal to make Juneau the world capital of Northwest Coast arts.

With this grant from the U.S. Department of Education, the institute says it’s about 70% to its goal for this project. The institute is  asking for donations for the project online.

Jeremy Hsieh is the training editor of the Alaska Desk.
Reach Jeremy at jhsieh@alaskapublic.org or 907-550-8428.