
To passionately set the standard for strengthening, revitalizing and preserving the identity and history of our communities through equitable and inclusive development.
Historic District Development Corporation’s latest reported grant was a single $2,008,211 operating support award to Hddc Equitable Development Corporation in Atlanta. That one grant sits alongside a clear place-based pattern: the foundation funds redevelopment, preservation, and community infrastructure in the Sweet Auburn Historic District and Old Fourth Ward, with work tied to long-term affordability, Black cultural history, and neighborhood-led development. Its active programs show how those goals are put into practice. Affordable housing efforts include shared-equity homeownership and multifamily rental development intended to keep homes affordable over time. Arts and culture work centers the cultural significance of Sweet Auburn and Old Fourth Ward, including space for exhibitions and community use. The Front Porch initiative adds urban agriculture, food access, and local economic activity through farmers markets, garden installations, and support for Black urban farmers. The foundation also operates rental event space at 348 Auburn Avenue NE, linking site activation with program revenue. Across these programs, the common thread is stewardship of specific Atlanta neighborhoods rather than broad regional grantmaking.
Affordable housing is one of the foundation’s clearest priorities. Through its Affordable Housing program, Historic District Development Corporation supports redevelopment projects in Sweet Auburn that combine shared-equity homeownership with multifamily affordable rentals. That program is explicitly tied to long-term affordability and neighborhood revitalization. Urban agriculture is another defined area of work. The Front Porch initiative focuses on food access, community economic development, and opportunities for Black urban farmers through pop-up farmers markets, farm-to-table relationships with restaurants, and garden installations. Arts and culture also play a central role. The Arts & Culture Program supports the cultural significance of Old Fourth Ward and Sweet Auburn, including use of the redeveloped Haugabrooks building as an affordable art gallery and event space. The Mtamanika Youngblood Curator-in-Residence Program extends that focus with support for three exhibitions over 12 months on Black history and culture.
The foundation’s reported grant size distribution is flat: p25, median, and p75 are all $2,008,211. That points to a single observed grant amount in the available data rather than a broad spread. The latest filing is for 2023, and the funder is organized as a public charity with $29,856,749 in assets and $2,008,211 in annual grants given. The recipient profile also suggests a local, place-based pattern rather than a dispersed portfolio: the grants data show all awards going to recipients in Georgia, with Atlanta as the only recipient city identified. One program, the Affordable Housing effort, explicitly accepts unsolicited requests; several other programs also note that they accept unsolicited applications.
$2M
$29.9M
$5.2M
$4.3M
Most grants fall between $2M and $2M, with a median of $2M.
25th Percentile
$2M
Median
$2M
75th Percentile
$2M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in GA.
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Grantmaking is concentrated in Atlanta neighborhoods, especially Sweet Auburn Historic District and Old Fourth Ward. The recipient city shown in the grants data is Atlanta, GA, and 100% of grants in the available record go to recipients in the HQ state of Georgia. Program geography is even more specific: affordable housing, arts and culture, urban agriculture, and event-space activity all cluster around Sweet Auburn and nearby Old Fourth Ward. The recipient country distribution is entirely U.S.-based, with 1 grant in the United States.
The foundation’s active programs center on affordable housing, urban agriculture and food access, arts and culture, and community development tied to historic preservation. Those areas are reflected in work on shared-equity homeownership, multifamily rentals, Black urban farmer support, cultural heritage, and neighborhood revitalization in Sweet Auburn and Old Fourth Ward.
In the available data, the grant-size distribution is a single point: p25 is $2,008,211, median is $2,008,211, and p75 is $2,008,211. The latest reported grant is also $2,008,211 in operational support.
The available grants all go to Georgia recipients, and the recipient city shown is Atlanta. Program geography is concentrated in Sweet Auburn Historic District and Old Fourth Ward, so the foundation’s giving is highly local.
Yes for some programs. The Affordable Housing program accepts unsolicited requests, and the Arts & Culture Program and Mtamanika Youngblood Curator-in-Residence Program also note that they accept unsolicited applications.
Its arts and culture work supports the cultural significance of Sweet Auburn and Old Fourth Ward, including an affordable art gallery and event space in the redeveloped Haugabrooks building. The curator-in-residence program also funds three exhibitions over 12 months focused on Black history and culture.
2023
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2023.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HDDC EQUITABLE DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION | ATLANTA, GA | $2,008,211 | 2023 | OPERATIONAL SUPPORT |
HDDC EQUITABLE DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
$2,008,211OPERATIONAL SUPPORT