Deadline: 10 January 2025
The U.S. Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation (AFCP) helps protect historic buildings, archaeological sites, museum collections, and traditional cultural expressions like indigenous languages and crafts around the world.
Funding Information
- Total available funding: $6 million (estimated)
- Award amounts: Awards may range from a minimum of $25,000 to a maximum of $500,000
- Number of awards anticipated: 25-35
- Length of performance period: 12 to 60 months.
Eligible Activities
- Anastylosis: Reassembling a site using its original parts.
- Conservation: Treating or otherwise addressing damage or deterioration to an object or site.
- Consolidation: Reconnecting elements of an object or site.
- Documentation: Recording the condition and important features of an object, site, or tradition in analog or digital format.
- Inventory: Listing objects, sites, or traditions by location, feature, age, or other unifying characteristics.
- Preventive Conservation: Addressing conditions that threaten or damage a site, object, collection, or tradition.
- Restoration: Replacing missing elements to recreate the original appearance of an object or site, usually appropriate for fine arts, decorative arts, and historic buildings.
- Stabilization: Reducing the physical disturbance or increasing the stability of an object or site.
Participants and Audiences
- Local communities, government agencies, educational institutions, tourists, and others interested in cultural heritage and its preservation.
Eligibility Criteria
- Only these types of organizations may apply:
- Foreign Institutions of Higher Education
- Foreign-Based Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)
- Foreign Public Entities (where permitted)
- Public International Organizations and Governmental Institutions
- U.S. Institutions of Higher Education
- U.S. Non-Profit Organizations (IRS section 501(c)(3))
Ineligibility Criteria
- AFCP does not support the following activities or costs, and applications requesting AFCP support for any of these activities or costs will be deemed ineligible:
- Privately or Commercially Owned Property: Preservation or purchase of privately or commercially owned cultural objects, collections, or real property, including those whose transfer from private or commercial to public ownership is envisioned, planned, or in process but not complete at the time of application.
- Natural Heritage: Preservation of natural heritage (physical, biological, and geological formations, paleontological collections, habitats of threatened species of animals and plants, fossils, etc.) unless the natural heritage has a cultural heritage connection or dimension.
- Human Remains: Preservation of Hominid or human remains.
- News Media: Preservation of news media (newspapers, newsreels, radio and TV programs, etc.).
- Published Materials: Preservation of published materials available elsewhere (books, periodicals, etc.).
- Mandated Educational Materials: Development of curricula or educational materials for required classroom use.
- Archaeological Research: Archaeological excavations or exploratory surveys for research purposes.
- Historical Research: Historical research, except in cases where the research is justifiable and integral to the success of the proposed project.
- New Exhibits or Collections: Acquisition or creation of new exhibits, objects, or collections for new or existing museums.
- New Construction: Construction of new buildings, building additions, or permanent coverings (over archaeological sites, for example).
- New Works of Art: Commissions of new works of art or architecture for commemorative or economic development purposes.
- New or Modern Adaptations: Creation of new or modern adaptation of existing traditional dances, songs, chants, musical compositions, plays, or other performances.
- Conjectural Reconstructions: Creation of conjectural reconstructions of cultural objects or sites that no longer exist.
- Relocation: Relocation of cultural sites from one physical location to another unless under imminent threat of irreversible damage or destruction.
For more information, visit Grants.gov.