The presentation was streamed online, and Kaherl said she hoped that the event would cast her city in a positive light. Detroit’s been well-known in recent years for economic turmoil and dilapidated cityscapes.
But the Soup project is a small bright spot for the city. Detroiters that participate eat soup, bread and salad together while watching presenters tout projects that impact citizens’ lives. The Jam Handy building, located near Detroit’s midtown area, hosts the sessions, and the winning project receives all the money collected that evening.
Kate Daughdrill and Jessica Hernandez founded Detroit Soup in February 2010, and by April, the first fundraising winner was a Rust Belt Architecture photo book that received $110. Today the Soup sessions garner hundreds of attendees. More than $30,000 has been disbursed to local projects, including some supporting bicycle education and safety and a program to grow and sell food.
Kaherl, the Soup’s current leader, pays for rent and general operation expenses in the Jam Handy building with an $80,000 grant from the Knight Foundation. Soup gets seven to 18 proposals a month and Kaherl and staff narrow these entries to about a handful that will be presented before diners.
“Crowdfunding is the 21st century equivalent of barn-raising,” said Thomas Kalil, the White House deputy director for technology and innovation, in an earlier prepared statement. “We can use it to help our neighbors and fellow citizens start a business, enrich our culture, and apply grassroots creativity and imagination to challenges big and small.”
Photo from Shutterstock.