
To advance the economic vitality, transportation, infrastructure, workforce and quality of life of the 495/MetroWest region through regional collaboration, advocacy, and strategic initiatives.
495 Metrowest Corridor Partnership Inc’s recent grantmaking is defined by place-based investments in the 495/MetroWest region, with a single 2023 award of $301,708 to the Town of Natick for light-based placemaking. That kind of project funding appears across the portfolio: municipalities and downtown organizations received support for streetscapes, parking access, business directories, public art calls, and public-space improvements. The largest grants point to a practical strategy for strengthening downtowns and main streets through visible infrastructure and activation. In 2023, the foundation also gave $99,398 to the Town of Maynard for parking improvements and $91,275 to the Town of Acton for a business directory, incubator, and call for public art. Together, these grants show a focus on economic vitality and quality of life that is tied to specific local projects rather than broad operating support. The funding pattern aligns with its stated emphasis on regional collaboration, advocacy, and strategic initiatives across the 495/MetroWest corridor.
Economic development is a central theme in the portfolio. The foundation gave $91,275 to the Town of Acton for a business directory, incubator, and call for public art, and $11,000 to the Town of Medfield for a business portal. Those awards connect local business visibility with downtown activity. Transportation and access also appear in the giving: the Town of Maynard received $99,398 for parking improvements, a direct infrastructure investment for a town center. Public realm work is another clear thread. The Town of Ashland received $75,000 for downtown streetscape improvements, while the Town of Marlborough received $14,817 for a main street public park. The grants are project-specific and oriented toward the built environment, with municipalities as the main recipients.
Grant sizes cluster around mid-range project awards, with a p25 of $22,454, a median of $50,000, and a p75 of $93,306. The 2023 list suggests a mix of large anchor awards and smaller implementation grants, from six figures down to five figures. The recipient list in the provided data is entirely 2023, so the recent pattern is a single-year snapshot rather than a multi-year series. The foundation is a public charity, does not fund individuals, and does not make program-related investments. Its awards are place-based and appear to be made directly to public-sector or local improvement entities rather than through an open application program.
$643K
$712K
$1M
$1M
Most grants fall between $22K and $93K, with a median of $50K.
25th Percentile
$22K
Median
$50K
75th Percentile
$93K
About 100% of grants go to recipients in MA.
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Grantmaking is local and entirely concentrated in Massachusetts: 100% of grants in the provided data went to recipients in the HQ state. The towns named in the recent grants list include Natick, Maynard, Acton, Ashland, Shrewsbury, Westborough, Marlborough, and Medfield. That spread shows activity across the 495/MetroWest corridor rather than a single municipality. The recipient country distribution is entirely U.S.-based, with 8 grants to U.S. recipients.
The recent grants are tied to downtown and corridor projects: light-based placemaking in Natick, parking improvements in Maynard, a downtown streetscape in Ashland, a main street public park in Marlborough, and business visibility tools such as directories and portals in Acton, Westborough, and Medfield.
The listed recipients are local public entities and place-based organizations, especially towns. In the recent grants list, the foundation gave to the Town of Natick, Town of Maynard, Town of Acton, Town of Ashland, Town of Shrewsbury, Town of Westborough, Town of Marlborough, and Town of Medfield.
Typical grant sizes are centered in the middle of the five-figure range: p25 is $22,454, the median is $50,000, and p75 is $93,306. The recent grants list also includes one award above $300,000 and several awards between roughly $11,000 and $99,000.
In the provided data, all 8 grants went to recipients in Massachusetts, and the recipient country distribution is 100% U.S. The top state by grant count is also Massachusetts.
2023
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2023.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOWN OF NATICK | NATICK, MA | $301,708 | 2023 | LIGHT BASED PLACEMAKING |
| TOWN OF MAYNARD | MAYNARD, MA | $99,398 | 2023 | PARKING IMPROVEMENTS |
| TOWN OF ACTON | ACTON, MA | $91,275 | 2023 | BUSINESS DIRECTORY, INCUBATOR, CALL FOR PUBLIC ART |
| TOWN OF ASHLAND | ASHLAND, MA | $75,000 | 2023 | DOWNTOWN STREETSCAPE |
| TOWN OF SHREWSBURY | SHREWSBURY, MA | $25,000 | 2023 | IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM |
| TOWN OF WESTBOROUGH | WESTBOROUGH, MA | $25,000 | 2023 | ONLINE BUSINESS DIRECTORY |
| TOWN OF MARLBOROUGH | MARLBOROUGH, MA | $14,817 | 2023 | MAIN STREET PUBLIC PARK |
| TOWN OF MEDFIELD | MEDFIELD, MA | $11,000 | 2023 | BUSINESS PORTAL |
TOWN OF NATICK
$301,708LIGHT BASED PLACEMAKING
TOWN OF MAYNARD
$99,398PARKING IMPROVEMENTS
TOWN OF ACTON
$91,275BUSINESS DIRECTORY, INCUBATOR, CALL FOR PUBLIC ART
TOWN OF ASHLAND
$75,000DOWNTOWN STREETSCAPE
TOWN OF SHREWSBURY
$25,000IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM
TOWN OF WESTBOROUGH
$25,000ONLINE BUSINESS DIRECTORY
TOWN OF MARLBOROUGH
MAIN STREET PUBLIC PARK
TOWN OF MEDFIELD
$11,000BUSINESS PORTAL