Abstract

This article tracks the design of a panoptic toolkit of complementary financial (grant and endowment, tax, debt and equity) and non-financial (regulation, real estate, risk mitigation and performance, capacity building, impact metric and digital network) instruments, designed to leverage capital investment and engender collaborative partnerships, to encourage investment capital to flow to cultural heritage adaptive reuse activities. Cultural heritage activities encompass adaptive reuse and energy retrofit of built heritage structures, protecting natural eco-systems and enabling local community enterprise activities. These activities embody circular economy dimensions, that stimulate social, cultural, environmental and economic regeneration, within the global value chain. Many cultural heritage investments entail long-term time horizons, requiring patient investment strategies. Consideration of the financial landscape, with regard to capital investment leverage is as much about understanding the motivations of participants to engage in the capital markets, as about innovations in financial instruments to safeguard cultural heritage values. Individual financial instruments, within the toolkit, such as debt and equity tools, are not new and some have a long association within traditional capital markets. What is new, is a framework for the engagement of blended complementary instruments, pooled within diverse multidisciplinary collaborative social enterprise fund structures, to achieve intentional and measurable impact investment returns. Risk adjusted investment return metrics include the analysis of socio-cultural and environmental impact returns in unison with market based financial returns, including below market returns in some instances. A case study of a revolving social impact fund is provided to give a practical example of combined complementary hybrid financial instruments within a collaborative funding structure. The ultimate choice and design of blended and pooled hybrid tool combinations and hybrid fund structures will change from building to building, and community to community, but must always prioritize the need to protect people and ecosystems in parallel with saving vulnerable cultural heritage resources. The selection of tailored hybrid financial instruments, to enhance circular economy transitionary ambitions, must remain flexible within a long-term collaborative investment strategy. The key change in mindset, central to cultural heritage financial toolkit development, is the enablement of capital leverage investment strategies that prioritize people and the ecosystem over pure profit motivation.

Highlights

  • The concept of a regenerative, generative and symbiotic ‘Triple Circular’ adaptive reuse strategy developed by Fusco Girard provides a valuable guiding principle for decision makers to inform the choice and design of holistic regenerative funding mechanisms that align with the ultimate goal of achieving value creation where societal, environmental and financial benefits are in equilibrium [24]

  • Tailored Financing is the process whereby investors choose from a range of available financial instruments where the choice is dependent on the risk, return and impact profile of the investor

  • This article maps the creation on an integrated panoptic investment leverage toolkit, incorporating umbrella categories of both financial and non-financial instruments, together incorporating umbrella categories of both financial and non-financial instruments, towith identified social enterprise capital investment leverage enablers

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Summary

Introduction

Protection and management of natural eco-systems; Local community social enterprise activities. Government revenues are still the primary source of funding for urban and rural development in many regions across Europe. Cultural heritage investment and social enterprise activities, by their nature, involve long term (sometimes perpetual) investment horizons which require integration of sustainable and circular investment principles. The design of circular financial instruments has the potential to make a contribution towards the transition to systemic sustainability and circular economy practices within the built and natural environment. To contribute to the quest for circular investment strategies, this article tracks the development of a flexible toolkit of complementary financial and non-financial instruments, designed to leverage capital investment and encourage collaborative social enterprise partnerships for the adaptive reuse of cultural heritage

European Investment Stimulus
The Cultural Built Heritage Investment Enigma
Research Query
Cultural Heritage
Cultural Capital
Adaptive Reuse
Circular Economy
Toolkit Design
The Role of Market Spheres for Investment Leverage
Investment Motivations of Market Spheres
Public–Private Partnerships Structures
Financial Instruments
Hybrid Financial Instruments and Tailored Financing
Sustainable and Circular Financial Reporting
Circular Business Models
Understanding Risk-adjusted Market and Impact Return Metrics
Market Return Metrics
Impact Return Metrics
Integrated
Overview of Hybrid
B Corporation Certification
Case Study
Calvert Community Investment Note
Calvert Co-lending Syndication Service
Catalytic and Revolving Investment Leverage and Capacity Building Support
Calvert Intentional Impact Metrics
Findings
Concluding Observations
Full Text
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