The 10-25 Tomorrow Foundation concentrates its giving on arts and environmental causes while also supporting neighborhood-level community development in Minneapolis. It makes relatively few, sizable grants — notably repeated large gifts to a single performing arts venue — alongside substantial support for marine conservation and local neighborhood organizing. The foundation appears to balance a strong local arts commitment with interest in environmental advocacy and community impact.
The clearest pattern in 10-25 Tomorrow Foundation’s giving is its repeated support for Firehouse Performing Arts Center in Minneapolis, with three recent grants totaling $190,000 across 2023, 2024, and 2025. That relationship sits alongside a larger grant to Oceanic Preservation Society for marine and ocean conservation advocacy, showing a portfolio that combines place-based arts support with environmental advocacy. The foundation also backs neighborhood-level work in the Minneapolis area, including East Phillips Neighborhood Institute, which points to an interest in community organizing and local environmental justice. Recent grants are relatively few and substantial, rather than widely spread across many recipients. The largest recent award in the data went to Oceanic Preservation Society, while the Minneapolis arts venue received two additional sizable grants after an earlier award. Together, the recent record shows a funder that concentrates on a small set of organizations and sustains them over time through repeat grants.
Arts infrastructure is a major thread in the foundation’s giving. In 2025, it gave $90,000 to Firehouse Performing Arts Center for general support, following a $55,000 grant in 2024 and a $45,000 grant in 2023. The pattern suggests ongoing support for a specific venue rather than one-off project funding. Environmental advocacy is another clear area: in 2024, the foundation granted $105,000 to Oceanic Preservation Society for general support, linking its portfolio to marine and ocean conservation. Locally, it also supported neighborhood organizing and environmental justice through a $50,000 grant to East Phillips Neighborhood Institute in 2024. Across these areas, the foundation appears to favor targeted grants to organizations working on infrastructure, advocacy, and community-level change.
The grant-size pattern is concentrated at the upper end of the foundation’s range: the 25th percentile is $45,000, the median is $50,000, and the 75th percentile is $55,000. That distribution fits the recent record of relatively few, sizable awards, with one larger outlier at $105,000. The data also show relationship-based funding: Firehouse Performing Arts Center received grants in three consecutive years, while the other named recipients appear once in the recent-grants list. The foundation is not structured as an individual-giving vehicle and does not make program-related investments. Its giving is local, with most grants landing in Minnesota.
$350K
$649K
$128K
$102K
Most grants fall between $45K and $55K, with a median of $50K.
25th Percentile
$45K
Median
$50K
75th Percentile
$55K
About 80% of grants go to recipients in MN.
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Concentrated giving with a small number of large grants; repeat funding to a core local arts grantee combined with one-off major gifts to environmental and neighborhood organizations.
Notable grantees: Firehouse Performing Arts Center, Oceanic Preservation Society, East Phillips Neighborhood Institute
Most grants land in Minnesota, which accounts for 80% of recipient locations in the data. Minneapolis appears repeatedly through support for Firehouse Performing Arts Center, and St. Paul appears with a smaller grant to Small Sums. Outside Minnesota, one recent grant went to Greenbrae, California. The recipient-country distribution is entirely U.S.-based, with all six recent grants going to U.S. organizations.
The foundation supports performing arts infrastructure, marine and ocean conservation advocacy, and neighborhood environmental justice and community organizing. Recent grants include support for a Minneapolis performing arts center, an environmental advocacy group in California, and a neighborhood institute in the East Phillips area.
Yes. Firehouse Performing Arts Center received three recent grants: $45,000 in 2023, $55,000 in 2024, and $90,000 in 2025. That pattern points to sustained support rather than isolated gifts.
The grant-size distribution is tightly clustered: the 25th percentile is $45,000, the median is $50,000, and the 75th percentile is $55,000. The recent record also includes one larger grant of $105,000.
The foundation’s giving is local. Minnesota receives 80% of its grants, and the recent-grants list is entirely U.S.-based, with recipients in Minneapolis, St. Paul, Edina, and Greenbrae.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FIREHOUSE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER | MINNEAPOLIS, MN | $90,000 | 2025 | GENERAL |
| OCEANIC PRESERVATION SOCIETY | GREENBRAE, CA | $105,000 | 2024 | GENERAL |
| FIREHOUSE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER | MINNEAPOLIS, MN | $55,000 | 2024 | GENERAL |
| EAST PHILLIPS NEIGHBORHOOD INSTITUTE | EDINA, MN | $50,000 | 2024 | GENERAL |
| SMALL SUMS | ST PAUL, MN | $5,000 | 2024 | GENERAL |
| FIREHOUSE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER | MINNEAPOLIS, MN | $45,000 | 2023 | GENERAL |
FIREHOUSE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
$90,000GENERAL
OCEANIC PRESERVATION SOCIETY
$105,000GENERAL
FIREHOUSE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
$55,000GENERAL
EAST PHILLIPS NEIGHBORHOOD INSTITUTE
$50,000GENERAL
SMALL SUMS
$5,000GENERAL
FIREHOUSE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
$45,000GENERAL