Past Projects
Below is a sample of past projects that the Riley Center has worked on.
2024/2025
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Gullah Geechee Heritage Preservation Project
The is a collaborative initiative focused on preserving historic Gullah Geechee and African American ancestral communities and their cultural sites. Funded by the historic Preservation Fund's Underrepresented Communities Grant Program and supported by the City of ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, the Preservation Society of ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø County, the Town of Mount Pleasant and the Riley Center, the project aimed to document and protect significant sites, assist with formal recognition, and foster sustainable partnerships for ongoing preservation efforts.
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City of Orangeburg
The Riley Center facilitated the development of the City of Orangeburg's strategic plan.
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ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Alternative to Detention
Riley Center/MPA graduate assistants worked with the local non-profit organization, ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Alternative to Detention, to prepare a state of field on the rates of juvenile detention in the Tri-County Region, as well as a preliminary research on the monetary burden on the Tri-County for detaining youth in detention facilities.
2023/2024
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Union Pier Redevelopment
Following extensive community feedback, the City of ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø and South Carolina Ports Authority reached an agreement in June 2023 to extend the planning timeline for Union Pier, with the goal of establishing a new plan that centers the needs and priorities of the community. South Carolina Ports contracted with the Joseph P. Riley Jr. Center for Livable Communities at the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø to facilitate a community engaged planning process.
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Park Equity Policy Scan: Documenting Equitable Park Access Policy
In collaboration with Trust for Public Land's 10-Minute Walk team, Riley Center faculty and staff developed, tested and validated a Park Equity Policy Framework and data collection tool to systematically collect information and describe the state of the field for policies aimed at increasing equitable access to park space. The tool was used to collect data for 25 U.S. cities, representing a variety of population sizes, geographic locations, and percentages of racial/ethnic minority residents. The tool was validated through interviews with city leaders in 19 of the 25 cities.
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Together for Beaufort County
The Riley Center continued its partnership with Together for Beaufort County (T4BC) by building upon the TB4C 2021 Indicators Report that was created by the Riley Center. The 2021 report presented an overall glimpse of the status and environment of the following indicators in Beaufort County: health, social well-being, economy, environment, and education. The Riley Center researched early childhood indicators by assessing Kindergarten Readiness data and providing a geographic context to public demographic data and early childhood services to better understand the landscape of education in Beaufort County.
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Dorchester County Opioid Abatement Strategic Planning
The Riley Center facilitated a strategic plan process with Dorchester County to determine the most effective use for the South Carolina Opioid Recovery Fund allocated to the County.
2020
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The Challenge of Financing Resiliency
The Riley Center partnered with the Virginia Coastal Policy Center at William & Mary Law School to host a discussion on strategies and tools local government can use to finance resilience projects. Speakers included Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr along with experts in the insurance and banking industries, local government, and the private sector.
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Hurricane Dorian Resilience Assessment
The Riley Center partnered with the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Resilience Network and the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Metro Chamber of Commerce to increase understanding of how hurricanes impact local organizations. The Riley Center administered an electronic survey to Chamber members in ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, Dorchester and Berkeley Counties to assess damage sustained and perception of major storms. This survey focuses on the impacts of Hurricane Dorian, with questions that also address regional resilience, information reliability, and response planning.
Tri-County Resilience Assessment
2019
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ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Youth Count
The ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø YOUth Count is an initiative of the Riley Center and key community partners to count and understand the needs and assets of people under the age of 25 who are housing and/or food insecure. By documenting the size of this vulnerable population and scoping the nature of the services they need, it is anticipated that local, state, and national service providers will be better informed to act on their behalf.
ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø YOUth Count -
Analysis of the Town of Mount Pleasant Arts Community
The Town of Mount Pleasant, SC sought to better understand the art community it serves. The Riley Center led this research and used interviews with administrators, council members, and residents in order to complete this project. An arts inventory and community questionnaire was also developed, and the data paired with existing literature and examples to offer findings and recommendations for the future.
Mt. Pleasant Arts Community
2016
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Food Systems Change Initiative
The Food Systems Change Initiative was a multi-agency collaborative directed by Dr. Olivia Thompson and the Riley Center, with funding provided by The Boeing Company. The initiative began in 2012 as a ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø based farm-to-school program and has since become a statewide effort to increase access to healthy local foods to food insecure youth, in particular.
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Hunger-Free Summer Hubs Initiative
The Hunger-Free Summer Hubs Initiative included personnel from the Lowcountry Food Bank, the Joseph P. Riley Jr. Center for Livable Communities at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, Feeding America, the Family Resiliency Center at the University of Illinois, and AmeriCorps VISTA. This team was established to conduct a research study to better determine recommendations for increased summer feeding program participation in the Lowcountry Food Bank's service area, which includes 10 coastal counties.
Hunger Free Summer Hubs Initiative -
South Carolina Coalition for Homeless: Point-in-Time Report
Every year, the PIT (Point-in-Time) count is performed as federally mandated by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development for all communities receiving federal funds through the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Grant Program. The PIT count takes an unduplicated census of people experiencing homelessness, sheltered or not, on a given night in January and helps communities better understand the magnitude and characteristics of its homeless population.
2016 Point-in-Time Report
2014/2015
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Lowcountry Graduate Center Educational Assessment
A comprehensive study using focus groups and surveys was performed for the Lowcountry Graduate Center in order to determine the interest and barriers to obtaining a graduate degree in the fields of advanced manufacturing and engineering, education, and healthcare.
Lowcountry Graduate Center Report -
Tri-County Housing Blueprint
In coordination with the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Trident Association of Realtors (CTAR) and the South Carolina Community Loan Fund, the Riley Center for Livable Communities helped to create a blueprint of actionable items to increase the number of housing units affordable to the region's growing workforce.
2014 Tri-County Housing Blueprint