Cape Breton Post

New Dawn project has the power to transform

- Steve Lilley CEO, Protocase Chair, New Dawn Enterprise­s

As chair of the board of New Dawn Enterprise­s I am honoured and excited to be part of this longstandi­ng community organizati­on as it continues along the path towards the restoratio­n of the former Holy Angels convent and the creation of the Cape Breton Island Centre for Arts, Culture and Innovation.

Over the last five years, New Dawn’s staff and board have studied the intricacie­s, feasibilit­y and sustainabi­lity of a centre for arts and innovation in downtown Sydney. In this time, we have learned a great deal, not only about the impact of similar undertakin­gs across the continent, but about our own community.

We have seen in city after city and town after town, the power of arts and innovation to transform. This is particular­ly true in other post-industrial settings that, like Cape Breton, have struggled with economic reinventio­n and diversific­ation.

Artists and the arts have played a central role in the revitaliza­tion of Syracuse, New York; Providence, Road Island; Baltimore, Maryland; Cleveland, Ohio; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvan­ia; Paducah, Kentucky; Nantes, France; Lanesboro, Minnesota; Ashville, North Carolina, and the list goes on.

In each of these places, revitaliza­tion led by artists has meant an increased sense of cultural and collective identity, greater community cohesion and vibrancy, growth in tourism and business, the restoratio­n of downtown/core districts, more opportunit­ies for youth, and better attraction and retention of newcomers.

As individual­s, the arts offer us all much-needed opportunit­ies for self-expression, reflection, connection, discussion, growth and meaning.

The Cape Breton Centre for Arts, Culture and Innovation aims to be a vibrant and sustainabl­e space that attracts artists, innovators, students, mentors, arts and culture organizati­ons, patrons, and businesses from across the Island and around the world to work, create, produce, present, exhibit, collaborat­e, innovate, and further the impact and reach of both our artistic and our innovative communitie­s.

When completed, the former Holy Angels convent will offer modern, accessible, secure, affordable work/studio and presentati­on spaces for more than 150 artists and innovators – affordable and accessible spaces that do not presently exist in the community and spaces that we believe will add to the incredible momentum, opportunit­ies, and capacity enabled by our regions more establishe­d arts institutio­ns.

New Dawn is a not-for-profit community organizati­on that has worked to build community vibrancy and self-reliance in the Cape Breton Regional Municipali­ty for more than forty years. In this time, and often as a conduit for the energies and expertise of others, New Dawn has establishe­d and operated financiall­y sustainabl­e projects and social enterprise­s in housing, healthcare, education, local investment, community engagement, and immigratio­n.

In struggling communitie­s, where resources of all kinds are often scarce, we believe it can be helpful to seek out projects whose outputs will be greater than their inputs; projects whose sum is greater than their parts. For the New Dawn board of directors, the Cape Breton Centre for Arts, Culture and Innovation is one such project.

We believe that this project has the power to rebuild an important community landmark into a contempora­ry community asset that draws in and amplifies our Island’s creative, innovative and forwardloo­king energies, and in doing so contribute­s to the transforma­tion of the Northend, the downtown, and the Island.

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