Deadline: 29-Sep-2026
The Columbia River Basin Public Art Program supports communities in creating permanent public art projects that celebrate their connection to the Columbia River system and local watersheds. The program helps local governments, non-profits, and First Nations communities develop accessible artworks that strengthen community identity, shared spaces, and public engagement.
Funding may cover up to 100% of total project costs, with a maximum contribution of $75,000 per project. Eligible projects must be located within the Columbia Basin Trust region and feature permanent public art created by Basin artists.
What is the Columbia River Basin Public Art Program?
The Columbia River Basin Public Art Program is a funding opportunity that supports permanent public art projects in communities across the Columbia Basin Trust region.
The program helps communities create meaningful artworks that reflect their relationship with the Columbia River system and surrounding local watersheds.
It is administered by the Columbia Kootenay Cultural Alliance and funded by the Columbia Basin Trust.
Main Purpose of the Program
The main purpose of the program is to support community-led permanent public art that celebrates place, identity, and connection to water.
The program aims to:
- Support permanent public art projects
- Celebrate the Columbia River system
- Highlight local watersheds
- Strengthen community identity
- Build a shared sense of place
- Improve public spaces
- Encourage community engagement
- Support healthy and resilient relationships
- Provide opportunities for Basin artists
Geographic Focus
Projects must take place within the Columbia Basin Trust region.
The artwork should reflect the community’s unique connection to the Columbia River system or local watershed.
Funding Amount
The program may provide funding of up to 100% of total project costs.
The maximum contribution is $75,000 per project.
Funding supports approved expenses after approval is received and a Contribution Agreement is signed between the recipient and the Columbia Kootenay Cultural Alliance.
Who is Eligible?
Eligible applicants include:
- Local governments
- Non-profit organisations
- First Nations communities
Applicants must be located within the Columbia Basin Trust region.
Individual artists are not eligible to apply directly.
Artist Requirement
Supported artworks must be produced by Basin artists.
This helps ensure that funded projects reflect local creativity, regional knowledge, and meaningful connection to the Columbia River Basin.
Project Eligibility
Eligible projects must involve permanent public art displayed in broadly accessible public spaces or buildings.
Projects must:
- Create or install permanent public artwork
- Be displayed in a public or broadly accessible location
- Celebrate the Columbia River system or local watershed
- Be created by Basin artists
- Demonstrate community support
- Include fair compensation for artists
- Include a plan for ongoing care and maintenance
Property and Site Access Requirement
Applicants must either own the property where the artwork will be displayed or have secure, long-term access rights to the location.
This requirement helps ensure that the artwork remains publicly accessible and properly maintained over time.
Supported Art Forms
The program supports a variety of permanent public art forms.
Examples may include:
- Sculptures
- Murals
- Installations
- Functional art
- Walking bridges with relief sculpture
- Engraved park benches
- Public artworks integrated into shared spaces
Eligible Project Costs
Eligible costs may include expenses directly connected to planning, creating, installing, and presenting the artwork.
Eligible costs may include:
- Public consultation
- Design solicitation
- Public calls for submissions
- Artist fees
- Project materials
- Mounting infrastructure
- Site preparation
- Transportation
- Installation
- Signage
Artist fees should be based on fair compensation.
What is Not Supported?
The program does not support projects that do not meet its public art, community, and watershed connection goals.
Ineligible projects include:
- Completed artwork purchased by applicants
- Artwork created by residents outside the Basin
- Projects that do not celebrate the Columbia River or local watershed
- Projects without fair compensation for artists
- Applications without demonstrated community support
- Projects without secure public display arrangements
Key Focus Areas
The program focuses on community identity, public space, and watershed connection.
Key focus areas include:
- Community-led public art
- Permanent public artwork
- Columbia River connection
- Local watershed connection
- Community identity
- Shared sense of place
- Accessible public spaces
- Community engagement
- Basin artist participation
- Long-term artwork care
- Healthy and resilient community relationships
Key Concepts Explained
Permanent Public Art
Permanent public art is artwork intended to remain in place over time and be accessible to the public.
Local Watershed
A local watershed is an area of land where water drains into a common river, lake, stream, or water system.
Community-Led Art
Community-led art involves local people, organisations, or communities in shaping the idea, design, meaning, or development of the artwork.
Functional Art
Functional art combines practical use with artistic expression, such as benches, bridges, signage, or other public features designed as artworks.
Fair Compensation
Fair compensation means paying artists appropriately for their time, skill, design work, materials, and creative contribution.
How the Program Works
Eligible applicants apply for funding to develop, install, and display permanent public art in their community.
Projects must show a strong connection to the Columbia River system or local watershed.
Once approved, funding is provided for eligible project expenses after a Contribution Agreement is signed.
The project should include community support, a strong public location, and a plan for maintaining the artwork over time.
How to Apply
Applicants should prepare a clear project proposal that explains the artwork concept, community connection, artist involvement, location, budget, and long-term care plan.
Suggested Application Steps
- Confirm that the applicant is an eligible local government, non-profit, or First Nations community.
- Confirm that the project is located within the Columbia Basin Trust region.
- Identify a public space or building for the artwork.
- Confirm property ownership or secure long-term access rights.
- Develop an artwork concept connected to the Columbia River or local watershed.
- Engage a Basin artist or plan a fair artist selection process.
- Gather evidence of community support.
- Prepare a budget of up to $75,000.
- Include eligible costs such as artist fees, materials, installation, signage, and site preparation.
- Prepare a plan for ongoing care and maintenance.
- Submit the application according to program requirements.
Assessment Considerations
Strong applications should clearly demonstrate community value, public accessibility, and connection to place.
Assessment may consider:
- Connection to the Columbia River system or watershed
- Community support
- Public accessibility
- Quality of the artwork concept
- Involvement of Basin artists
- Fair compensation for artists
- Strength of the site plan
- Long-term maintenance plan
- Enhancement of public spaces
- Community identity and shared sense of place
Expected Results
Funded projects should create lasting cultural, environmental, and community benefits.
Expected results may include:
- Permanent public artworks in Basin communities
- Stronger community connection to local watersheds
- Improved public spaces
- Greater visibility for Basin artists
- Stronger sense of local identity
- Increased community pride
- More accessible cultural experiences
- Public art that reflects the Columbia River system
- Long-term community engagement with shared spaces
Why It Matters
Public art can help communities tell stories, celebrate place, and create stronger connections between people and the landscapes around them.
In the Columbia Basin, the river system and local watersheds are central to community identity, ecology, history, and shared life.
The Columbia River Basin Public Art Program helps communities create permanent artworks that honour these relationships while improving accessible public spaces.
Tips for Strong Applications
A strong application should clearly show how the artwork connects community, place, and watershed.
Applicants should focus on:
- Strong connection to the Columbia River or local watershed
- Meaningful community engagement
- Clear public benefit
- Accessible public display location
- Strong involvement of Basin artists
- Fair artist compensation
- Realistic project budget
- Secure site access
- Long-term maintenance planning
- Demonstrated community support
Applicants should avoid proposing artwork that is decorative only and does not clearly connect to the river system, watershed, or community identity.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Applicants should carefully check the program’s eligibility and project requirements.
Common mistakes include:
- Applying as an individual artist
- Proposing artwork created by artists outside the Basin
- Purchasing completed artwork instead of developing a project
- Not showing a clear Columbia River or watershed connection
- Failing to demonstrate community support
- Not paying artists fairly
- Choosing a site without long-term access rights
- Proposing artwork in a location that is not broadly accessible
- Not including a maintenance plan
- Starting expenses before approval and signed agreement
FAQ
What is the Columbia River Basin Public Art Program?
It is a funding program that supports permanent public art projects celebrating community connections to the Columbia River system and local watersheds.
Who can apply?
Eligible applicants include local governments, non-profits, and First Nations communities within the Columbia Basin Trust region.
Can individual artists apply?
No. Individual artists are not eligible to apply directly.
How much funding is available?
The program may fund up to 100% of total project costs, with a maximum contribution of $75,000 per project.
What types of artwork are supported?
Supported artwork may include sculptures, murals, installations, and functional art such as engraved benches or walking bridges with artistic features.
What costs are eligible?
Eligible costs may include public consultation, artist fees, design calls, materials, site preparation, transportation, installation, mounting infrastructure, and signage.
What projects are not eligible?
Ineligible projects include purchased completed artwork, artwork created by residents outside the Basin, projects without watershed connection, projects without fair artist compensation, and applications lacking community support.
Conclusion
The Columbia River Basin Public Art Program supports local governments, non-profits, and First Nations communities in creating permanent public art that celebrates the Columbia River system and local watersheds. With funding of up to $75,000 per project, the program helps communities enhance public spaces, strengthen identity, and support Basin artists.
Strong applications will demonstrate a meaningful watershed connection, public accessibility, community support, fair artist compensation, secure site access, and a practical plan for long-term artwork care and maintenance.
For more information, visit Columbia Basin Trust.
























