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Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture launches fundraising campaign for independent incorporation

Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture launches fundraising campaign for independent incorporation

The goal is to raise $2 million before the end of 2015.


By The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation | December 15, 2014
Photo courtesy Greg O'Beirne/Wikimedia Commons
Photo courtesy Greg O'Beirne/Wikimedia Commons

The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation announced today that, at its Dec. 5 Board meeting, it approved a possible path towards independent incorporation of the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture.Ā  The Foundation Boardā€™s decision has been embraced and approved by the School of Architecture Board of Governors and representatives of alumni and the broader school community.

In order to meet critical fundraising goals that will allow it to achieve the financial autonomy necessary to become an independent organization, the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture is immediately launching the Campaign for Independence ā€“ to raise $2 million before the end of 2015.

Providing one of the most notable educational experiences in the country, the Schoolā€™s professional M.Arch degree program offers graduate students hands-on, design-intensive studio experiences within the immersive educational communities of Taliesin West (Scottsdale, Arizona) and Taliesin (Spring Green, Wisconsin).Ā  This past year saw the highest number of new students in the Schoolā€™s history, 100% student retention for the third consecutive year, and the launch a ā€œTeaching Fellowshipā€ program that has added five distinguished international architectural educators and practitioners to the Schoolā€™s teaching ranks.

Despite its recent successes, as was previously reported, accreditation for the School is threatened because the Higher Learning Commission (HLC) changed its by-laws, resulting in an expectation that the Foundation retain ultimate financial responsibility for the School while simultaneously ceding governance, financial, and operational control to a separate, autonomous organization.Ā  After two years of exploration and debate, the Foundation Board concluded that it could not agree to guarantee funding to an autonomous School to the level it would need to thrive without retaining ultimate control or decision-making authority, particularly given its responsibility to find funding for tens of millions of dollars (at least) in critically needed preservation work in the coming years and for the other critical components of the Foundationā€™s mission.

Following that determination, longtime supporters of the School suggested the possibility of raising substantial funds to create and support an independent School.Ā  The Foundation Board readily agreed that, if the School community can raise funds sufficient to demonstrate that the new organization would have ā€œits own financial resourcesā€ (as explicitly required by the HLCā€™s by-laws) then spinning off the School would not present the same obstacles.Ā  The new, independent school organization would take ultimate fiduciary responsibility for itself.

As part of the new structure, the Foundation would donate over $1 million in facilities-related cash expenses every year, related to the Schoolā€™s extensive use of Taliesin West and Taliesin as its campuses (at no cost to the School).Ā  The Foundation would also contribute an additional subsidy of $580,000 to the School in 2015, with decreasing levels of such additional transitional support over the next five years (but always continuing to cover 100% of annual facility-related expenses of well over $1 million).

ā€œIf the School community can successfully raise this $2 million,ā€ said Jeffrey Grip, Chair of the Foundation Board of Trustees the Foundation, ā€œthe Foundation will proudly and enthusiastically commit to independently raising funds to match that giving 3.5 to 1, with support of more than $7 million over the next five years.ā€

In order to achieve the desired independence and continue as a stand-alone School of Architecture, gifts and pledges for an initial $1 million in contributions must be received by March 27, 2015 ā€“ and gifts/pledges for a second million must be received by Dec. 31, 2015.

ā€œThere is an exceptionally bright future possible for the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture,ā€ said Maura Grogan, Chair of the Schoolā€™s Board of Governors.Ā  ā€œBut that future is only possible with the generous support of donors, right now.Ā  Without significant and immediate support, there will no longer be a stand-alone accredited Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture.Ā  This campaign is the only opportunity to save the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture as we know it ā€“ and to ensure its success and impact for decades to come.Ā  I urge people to join us in this critical endeavor.ā€

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