Des Moines, Iowa |
Vision and Impact
The Chinese Cultural Center of America was formed as a 501©(3) not for profit organization with the mission to foster improved friendship and economic ties between East Asia and America. Based on Iowa-the-well-known "Heartland of America"—and guided by a distinguished International Advisory Board that includes Architect I. M. Pei, Nobel Laureates Norman Borlaug, T. D. Lee and C. N. Yang, the Chinese Cultural Center of America is preparing now to undertake a project of worldwide significance. There are no models of such a center. In all ways the Chinese Cultural Center of America will be unique.
Iowa has an opportunity
to add greatly to the diverse cultural offerings and vibrant quality of
life in central Iowa, to provide a mechanism to help Iowans understand
and increasingly global and connected society, and to assist the economic
development of our state. This opportunity is the Chinese Cultural Center
of America (CCCA), proposed on a site leased from the City of Des Moines
on the east bank of the Des Moines River, 500 ft. south of Interstate 35.
The CCCA will be a cultural focus for the grandness of Chinese art, culture,
and food ways. It will be the first and only distribution center for world-class
traveling exhibitions of Chinese Art and Archaeological treasures in the
U.S. on a continuous basis. It will become a great attraction for Iowans
as well as for tourists to Des Moines from the surrounding states in the
midwest. Additionally, given the nature of Chinese polity, economy, and
society, the CCCA can also be a great help to efforts of internationally
minded Iowa companies as they seek a share of the expanding Chinese domestic
economy. The CCCA Building houses a Trade Liaison Office and a business
library containing computer database and electronic retrieving system disseminating
the most current information about Chinese domestic business and international
trade.
Dr. Shao, Architecture, ISU |
The Design
The 30,000 square foot Chinese of America building is designed in elegant classical Chinese style, surrounded by rock and water gardens with waterfalls cascading into the Des Moines River—the facility itself being a manifestation of Chinese culture. Approvals have been received from Federal, State and City authorities for the building site and architectural plans. |
When construction of the facility is completed by 2002, the Chinese Cultural Center of America will commence operations under five major functions:
The Business
Plan
The goal of the CCCA Business Plan is to generate diversified revenue streams sufficient to self-sustain operations and to provide a surplus to help underwrite all components of the center. The plan encompasses six income-generating sources:
The Campaign
Because the business plan approaches the operations of the Center as self-sustaining, except for the reserve endowment component of the campaign, all dollars raised will be for actual construction of the Center at its site on the banks of the Des Moines River. In addition to opportunities for general participation in the campaign and the appropriate public recognition, a variety of underwriting leadership opportunities will be available for major partners in the Center’s campaign. Exhibits, the gardens, the museum, and the Center itself will provide naming opportunities for the interested donors.
The campaign goal
is $6.5 million, of which $500,ooo is for the endowment and $6,000,000
is for construction. The Robert Hartsook and Associates of Wichita and
Phoenix, a well –established fund-raising consulting firm, completed a
campaign assessment study for the CCCA in late January 1998. They positively
concluded that the CCCA can raise the $6.5 million on account of its unique
and innovative features. The phased work of the project provides the opportunity
for multi-year pledges of support.
Commitments to Date
The project has a number of commitments to date which indicate significant support for the development of the Chinese Cultural Center of America.
Truly, the Chinese Cultural Center of America has been identified early on as a public/private partnership in support of enhanced cultural understanding and economic development. The construction of the Chinese Cultural Center of America will position all of Iowa through its capitol city to take a great leap forward in strengthening cultural and economic ties between East Asia and Iowa. |
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