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Neighborhood Partnering Program

Through the Neighborhood Partnering Program, Austin residents can work together to enhance the places they live, work and play. More than 80 community-initiated projects have been completed since the program first launched in 2010. Partner with us to build a project that benefits your community. We can create something new, add to or update what’s already there. Here are a few project examples to get you started, but we’re always open to new ideas, and we’d love to hear yours! 

We can help your neighborhood…

Get Creative with public art installations, like murals or mosaics.

Make Green Spaces with park improvements, rain gardens, or new mini-parks.

Celebrate Places by enhancing trail access or installing gateway signs.

Stay Connected with trails, bike lanes, sidewalks, and other ways to keep you moving safely.

Grow Roots with community gardens or landscaping.

Innovate with your own unique idea!

Community Impacts

Neighborhood Cost Share: The City helps local groups fund, develop, and construct their projects on City-owned property. In turn, local groups help with “cost-sharing" and project maintenance. Cost-sharing can be made through any combination of cash, donated materials, labor or volunteer hours.

Adopt-A-Spot: Groups can enter into an agreement with the City to beautify, enhance, and maintain a median, roadside, underpass, wall, or right-of-way. This program does not include funding.

Grant Assistance: The City provides funds to help meet the matching requirements of a grant that you’ve received or are applying for with an outside entity other than the City of Austin. The grant must be used to support a project that will improve a public space in Austin.

Program Requirements 

All proposed projects must:

  • Be on City-owned property or right of way
  • Be led by a nonprofit community group or a team of residents
  • Be accessible to the public and benefit the community
  • During the proposal process, show the support of neighbors and those affected by the project

Project Types 

Examples of suitable projects may include, but are not limited to: 

  • Trails and trailheads
  • Park improvements
  • Pocket parks
  • Community gardens and food forests
  • Bike lanes, sidewalks, pedestrian crossings and other pedestrian or bicycling enhancements
  • Beautification and landscaping
  • Rain gardens and green streets
  • Street furniture (benches, tables, trash/recycling bins)
  • Murals, mosaics and other public art
  • Adopting a median, roadside or other public space
  • See examples of past and current NPP projects.

Projects not suitable include: 

  • Speed and traffic control installations, including speed bumps, speed displays and intersection changes
  • Projects with the goal of displacing unhoused neighbors
  • Large-scale improvement projects over $350,000
  • Changes to recently built facilities or installations
  • Projects that memorialize individuals
  • Maintenance or repair of existing facilities 

Get Started

Learn more about the program and how it works. 

  • Review our frequently asked questions and proposal guides to learn more about partnering and the application process.

Still have questions or want to learn more?

Have an idea for a project? Submit a Project Interest Form and let us know how you’d like to partner. 

Please be patient; Project Interest Forms are reviewed monthly. NPP staff will respond with questions about your project and information about the next steps.

Note: The Project Interest Form is not an application. Our team will work with eligible projects to complete a proposal for further consideration. 

Neighborhood Partnering Program projects

Projects Underway

Project NameCommunity OrganizationFunding Type*
East Williamson Creek Greenbelt ProjectGo Austin / Vamos Austin (GAVA) and the East Williamson Creek AdoptersNCSP
Clawson & Lightsey Intersection BeautificationSouth Lamar Neighborhood AssociationNCSP
Blackshear Elementary Schoolyard StageBlackshear PTANCSP
Shoal Creek / W. 6th Street Bridge RestorationShoal Country ConservancyNCSP

*Funding Type: Indicates Neighborhood Cost Share Program (NCSP), Grand Assistance Program (GAP) or Adopt-A-Median

View Interactive Map

 

Completed Projects

Project NameCommunity OrganizationFunding TypeYear CompletePhotos
Patterson Park Sports Facility ImprovementsFriends of Patterson ParkNCSP2023View photos
Agave Bike LanesAgave Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2023 
Multi-Use Bike Polo Court at Metz ParkAustin Texas Bike Polo Social ClubNCSP2023View photos
T.A. Brown Park ImprovementsHighland Neighbrohood AssociationNCSP2023View photos
Whirlpool Patio Education CenterHill Country ConservancyNCSP2023View photos
Davis/White Park Trail LightingAlliance for African American Health in Central Texas and LBJ Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2023View photos
West Austin Park 9 1/2 Street EntryFriends of West Austin ParkNCSP2022View Photo
Bolm Road Beautification ProjectGovalle Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2022View photos
Colony Park - Park Entry & AccessColony Park Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2022View photos
Dove Springs Community Pride SignDove Springs ProudNCSP2022View photos
Skyview RaingardenSkyview Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2022View photo
West Bouldin Creek Greenbelt TrailheadWest Bouldin Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2022View photos
Pinehurst Sidewalk ExtensionOnion Creek Homeowners AssociationNCSP2022View photo
Englewood SidewalkPublic Green & WildNCSP2022View Photo
SONA Mosaic Mural (Buffalo Pass Mosaic)Southern Oaks Neighborhood Association (SONA)NCSP2021View photos
Gaga Pit at Cook ElementaryNorth Austin Civic Association (NACA)NCSP2021View Photo
Drury Lane Grackle Green Pocket ParkCherrywood Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2020View Photo
Creative Action Barton Springs MuralCreative ActionNCSP2020View photos
Murchison PlayscapeNorthwest Austin Civic Association (NWACA)NCSP2020View Photo
Windsor Park Gateway SignageWindsor Park Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2019View Photo
Westcreek GreenwayWestcreek Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2019View photo
Blackshear Rain GardenCreek PeopleNCSP2019View photo
Four Points Sidewalk ConnectionFoundation CommunitiesNCSP2019View photos
EM Franklin Green StreetJJ Seabrook Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2019 
Raintree Estates Beautification and Pocket ParkRaintree Estates Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2018View photo
Dawson Speed CushionsKeep Austin Beautiful CleanupsNCSP2018View photo
Spyglass Trailhead Improvement ProjectFriends of Spyglass TrailheadNCSP2018View photo
W. 35th Street Pedestrian PathThe Contemporary AustinNCSP2018View Photo
Festival Beach Food ForestFestival Beach Food ForestNCSP2018View photo
North Shoal Creek Garden, Beautification & SidewalksNorth Shoal Creek Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2017View photos
Bluebonnet Ramp Improvement ProjectFriends of Little Zilker ParkNCSP2017View photo
Central Williamson Creek Greenbelt Neighborhood Nature TrailEmerald Wood Community GardenNCSP2017 
Phase I Master Plan Implementation: Kingsbury GatewayPease Park ConservancyNCSP2017View photo
Austin Baseball Legacy Project at Historic Downs FieldFriends of Downs FieldNCSP2017View Photo
West Wind Trail Creative CrosswalksLa Fuerza de WestgateNCSP2017View Photo
Quail Creek Painted Bridges and Sidewalk ProjectNorth Austin Civic AssociationNCSP2016View photo
Highland Park Bike Lane Improvements on Hancock BridgeHighland Park Elementary HUB TeamNCSP2016View Photo
Beverly Island Green Space and Traffic IslandBryker Woods Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2016 
Beaconridge West Neighborhood Signage ImprovementBeaconridge West Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2016 
Murchison Pool ImprovementsNorthwest Austin Civic AssociationNCSP2016View photos
Southwest Parkway Bluebonnet SeedingEstates of Barton Creek Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2016 
Ridgelea Greenspace Beautification ProjectRidgelea Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2016View photo
Arroyo Seco Bike Lane ProjectBrentwood Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2016View photo
Lighting the Shoal Creek Trail: West 12th Street and Lamar Boulevard BridgesShoal Creek ConservancyNCSP2016View photos
Wilshire Wood Historic Marker PreservationWilshire Wood/Delwood 1 Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2016View photos
Sidewalks to Battlebend ParkBattle Bend Springs Homeowner AssociationNCSP2016View photo
Davis Lane Trail SegmentHill Country ConservancyNCSP2016View Photo
Sendera Partnering ProgramSendera Homeowners Association/Hill Country ConservancyNCSP2016View photo
Barton Hills MosaicBarton Hills-Horseshoe Bend Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2015View photo
Cherry Creek Community GardenCherry Creek Central Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2015View photos
Country Club Creek Trail ImprovementsSouth East Austin Trails and Greenways AllianceNCSP2015View photos
Adelphi Acre Community GardenAdelphi Acre Community GardenNCSP2015View photos
Salina/22nd St. Traffic CircleBlackland Community Development CorporationNCSP2015View photos
Treadwell Sidewalk ProjectWabucy (Walk-Bus-Bicycle) ZilkerNCSP2015View photo
Ramsey Park Renovation ProjectRosedale Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2015View photos
Tillery Street Sidewalk InstallationJJ Seabrook Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2015View photo
S.5th Street-Barton Sidewalk Installation  Galindo Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2015View photo
Arroyo Seco MedianCrewstview Neighborhood AssociationAdopt-A-Median2014View photo
Hollywood Ave. Cul-de-sacWild Hare CommunityAdopt-A-Median2014View photos
Meadowview Triangle Park ImprovementsHighland Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2014View photo
Senate Hills Landscaping and MaintenanceSenate Hills Home Owners AssociationNCSP2012View photo
Huffstickler GreenHyde Park Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2012View photo
Patterson Park MosaicWilshire Woods, Delwood, and Cherrywood Neighborhood AssociationsGAP2012View photo
Brentwood Park PavilionFriends of Brentwood ParkGAP2012View photo
Firehouse #16 Landscape/Wildlife Habitat ImprovementsCrestview-Brentwood Beautification CommitteeNCSP2012 
North Loop SidewalkNorthfield Neighborhood AssociationNCSP2012View photo
San Antonio Street between 22nd Street and MLK sidewalkGirl Scout Brownie Troop 591NCSP2011View photo
St. Elmo Road InitiativeFoundation CommunitiesNCSP2011View photo

Frequently Asked Questions about the Neighborhood Partnering Program

Looking for assistance with a project through the Neighborhood Partnering Program? To learn about what you'll need to develop a proposal and what to expect after you submit your completed proposal, visit the Neighborhood Partnering Program Proposal Instructions.

What kinds of projects does NPP partner on?

As long as the eligibility requirements are met, NPP will consider any small- to medium-sized project and work with your group to determine whether it is a good fit for the program. Projects must comply with all City codes and regulations. Some projects may require approval from multiple City departments. Submit a Project Interest Form and let us know about how you’d like to partner.

I have an idea for my neighborhood. Do I need others to join in?

NPP is all about community, and these projects can really bring a neighborhood or community together. We are happy to discuss your ideas, but keep in mind the proposal must come from a community group, neighborhood association, or nonprofit organization. Multiple groups can submit together or sign on as additional partners. 

If you are not already representing such a group, you will need to look for one that is interested in partnering.

How long does it take to complete a project proposal and get selected?

Completion of the project proposal takes time. The NPP team will work with you to answer your questions and guide you through the process. Proposals are reviewed by the NPP team to ensure they are complete and eligible for selection. Neighborhood Cost Share proposals usually take a couple of months to complete. The NPP Board meets twice annually to consider eligible proposals. Once you begin working with the NPP team, you will be advised about the timeframe for board consideration. Adopt-A-Spot and Grant Assistance Program proposals are reviewed and considered as they are received. Selection time depends on the complexity of the project and the availability of City staff to confirm and review proposals.

How do I know if the land is City-Owned or in the Right of Way (ROW)?

The Travis Central Appraisal District Website and the City of Austin’s Property Profile Tool are two tools you can use to determine property ownership. You can search by address or use the map search to find the area you’re considering. Contact NPP if you are having trouble determining if a space is eligible for the program.

Projects can also take place in the right-of-way (ROW). The “right of way” generally refers to streets, sidewalks, alleys, utilities, and other strips of land designated for public use. The right-of-way typically extends ten feet back from the edge of a street, but this can vary widely across the city. Projects can also occur on other City-owned land, like retaining walls, easements, and underpasses.

I need help with my proposal. Will you provide assistance?

Yes, based on availability, we can help you work through the proposal. You may not always know or be able to determine the answers for each section of the proposal. In some cases, the NPP team may need to assist you in determining budgets or discussing maintenance. If you have questions, or if you are struggling with any sections of the proposal, contact NPP and let us know how we can help.

We can also present more information about NPP to your group or organization.

Can I propose a project in a City park?

Yes! To apply for projects in City parks, recreation centers, or other park properties, visit the Community Activated Parks Project (CAPP) website. Any project in City parkland must obtain approval through CAPP, which streamlines the proposal process for neighbors and community groups.

My project idea does not fit with the NPP. What other resources can I look to for help with my local project?

Austin Transportation and Public Works

Austin Parks Foundation – ACL Music Festival Grants Program

Cultural Arts Division – Funding Opportunities for Creative Industries

Development Services Department – Urban Forest Grant

Economic Development Department - Heritage Grant

Keep Austin Beautiful – Beautification Resources

Texas Parks and Wildlife – Recreational Trails Grants

FAQ about the Neighborhood Cost-Sharing Program

How long does it take to complete a project?

Every project is different, and timelines depend on its scale and type of work. NPP aims to complete projects within 6 to 18 months of selection.

What must be included in my Neighborhood Cost Share Program proposal?

Visit Neighborhood Partnering Proposal Instructions to learn about the proposal process.

Who maintains the project once it's built?

The City will maintain most infrastructure improvements, such as sidewalks, bike lanes, and some major park improvements. In most other cases, the City does not have the ability to conduct ongoing maintenance, and your organization will need to assume responsibility for the maintenance and upkeep for the life of the project.

Are community gardens eligible for the Neighborhood Cost Share Program?

Yes, community gardens are great projects for the Neighborhood Cost Share Program and are eligible for funding. Community gardens have special permitting and review requirements and must also go through the City’s Community Gardens Program. We recommend that you consult the Community Gardens Program to learn about the process and available resources before submitting a Project Interest Form with NPP.

What projects are not eligible?

Projects not suitable for NPP include:

  • Speed and traffic control installations, including speed bumps, speed displays and intersection changes. You can find more information on the Transportation Engineering Division and Speed Management Program pages.
  • Projects with a goal of displacing unhoused neighbors
  • Large-scale improvement projects over $350,000
  • Changes to recently built facilities or installations

FAQ about Adopt-A-Spot and Grant Assistance Programs

What is the Adopt-A-Spot program?

‘’Spots’’ are City-owned land, like roadway medians or right of way (ROW). Medians are the strip of land that are often located between two directional traffic. In the past, residents have beautified medians with landscaping, birdhouses, murals, and more.  The “right of way” generally refers to streets, sidewalks, alleys, utilities, and other strips of land designated for public use. The right of way typically extends ten feet back from the edge of a street, but this can vary widely across the city. Projects can also occur on other City-owned land, like retaining walls, easements, and underpasses.

Projects that do not require City-funding and that are intended to improve medians, right of ways or other City-owned land qualify for the adopt-a-spot program.  

The Travis Central Appraisal District Website and the City of Austin’s Property Profile Tool are two tools you can use to determine property ownership. You can search by address, or use the map search to find the area you’re considering. Contact NPP if you are having trouble determining if a space is eligible for the program.

Below are links to help determine where the right-of-way space is located:

What is the maximum amount NPP will award in the Grant Assistance Program?

The program can help fund up to 50% of the local match requirement for a separate grant. The applicant must be responsible for fundraising or otherwise providing the remaining portion.

What types of grants qualify for the Grant Assistance Program?

We will consider most types of grants that come from entities other than the City of Austin. The grant must be used for projects on public spaces to create a long-lasting benefit for local communities.