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Grassroots Projects Get Funding Through ioby.org

Bats may have a scary reputation as blind bloodsuckers, but a few residents in the East Buntyn community actually want the winged mammals in their neighborhood. And after crowd-sourcing on ioby.org, they’ve raised the funds to build 10 bat houses (and one tower for Chimney Swift birds) in the East Memphis neighborhood.

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Residents of the East Buntyn neighborhood are building bat houses.

They’re hoping the $2,000 project will bring mosquito-eating, plant-pollinating bats and birds back to their neighborhood after years of roost disturbances and habitat loss have pushed them out of the area. The “Bring Back Bats and Birds to Buntyn” is just one of 67 projects in 17 zip codes being funded after a spring match funding campaign on ioby.org.

Ioby stands for “in our backyards,” and the site is used to crowd-source civic projects across the country. The website has had a Memphis presence for a couple years, but between March 30th and April 15th, ioby.org offered up $50,000 in match funds for Memphis projects that fund-raised during that period. Livable Memphis got involved, too.

“Livable Memphis was so excited by all the projects that we decided to put in additional dollars, and we still have some match funds that didn’t get spent out [during the matching period], so we’ll get to spend those on projects throughout the year,” said Ellen Roberds, creative placemaker at Livable Memphis.

Another of the funded projects will place 24 seats at Memphis Area Transit Authority (MATA) bus stops around the city. They’re focusing specifically on stops that don’t have bus shelters. To qualify for a bus shelter, a stop must have more than 50 riders per day. But some smaller stops still serve a large number of people but lack seating.

“The plan is to look at stops where fewer than 50 people board every day but still have enough people who board that it would be useful for people to have seats,” said Emily Trenholm, executive director of the Community Development Council of Greater Memphis. Trenholm is the project coordinator for the bus stop seat project.

Project Backboard

Project Backboard makeover at Charjean Park

Some other projects funded during the matching period include Project Backboard, which will use $6,125 to restripe and paint goal posts at 15 inner-city basketball courts, $3,125 for enhancements at the DIY Altown Skate Park at Lamar and Rozelle, and $6,000 to install new trail markers through Overton Park’s Old Forest.

Another group raised $1,195 to create a rock garden and “labyrinth green space” under the new “I Love Soulsville” mural at Mississippi and McLemore. And $5,761 was raised to throw a community party called Roundhouse Revival at the Mid-South Coliseum on May 23rd. A $410 project will provide helmets for young bicyclists.

“There’s a group that wants to put in herb gardens in vacant lots and eventually use the herbs to make tea,” Roberds said. “Vegetable gardens are pretty labor-intensive, but herbs are perennial and don’t require as much work.”

Although the matching process is over, some projects, such as the basketball striping project, are still working to raise some additional funds. And ioby.org accepts new Memphis projects all the time.

“We encourage people to start small,” Roberds said. “The best projects are the ones that are visible to the public and can be built upon.”

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Crowdsource Fund-raising Website ioby.org Launches $50K Match Fund for Memphis Projects

The folks behind ioby.org, the crowdsource fund-raising website for civic projects, are hoping to spur up to 20 new projects across Memphis, and they’re putting some money behind that wish.

Through their new “discover ioby” campaign, ioby.org has set aside $50,000 to match dollars raised for small civic projects for Memphis. The funds will be available between April 11th and 15th. To qualify, project ideas must be submitted to ioby by March 6th, and fund-raising campaigns must be launched by March 30th at the latest. At least 20 percent of the total project funds must be raised by April 11th to be considered for matching dollars.

Livable Memphis will be administrating the match grant, and they’ve set up a couple of free information sessions. The first meeting is tonight (Monday, February 23rd) at 5:30 p.m. at the Frayser Community Development Corporation (3684 North Watkins). And there’s another meeting on Saturday, February 28th at 10:30 a.m. at the Uptown Resource Center (314 A.W. Willis). More meetings will be scheduled in the coming weeks.

The under-construction Hamp Line bicycle path leading from Overton Park to the Shelby Farms Greenline was one of the city’s earliest successful ioby.org projects. Memphis Civic Solar, a Memphis Bioworks project to install 1.5 megawatts of solar energy spread across 30 different municipal buildings, was also funded through ioby.org.