So many artists live in pockets within West Tampa and Ybor City, but the density of people just isn’t that high yet, Smith told CL, adding that, “What we’re trying to do is make sure that where there’s this density of people, that the artists are represented and seen.”
Tampa Art Alliance’s potential new home gives the organization a chance to pull people in off downtown streets, before telling them to take a trolley over to Ybor City where they can visit the Kress Collective, Marcolina’s Fine Arts Gallery, the Florida Museum of Photographic Arts or Factory on Fifth. Visitors and residents would also be encouraged to go further down the Tampa Riverwalk to experience the public art in West Tampa.
“We want to kind of be like a heart—literally, a heart muscle—that’s pulling the people in and then pushing them out to all these places, and increasing the visibility of regional art,” Smith said. “We have some world class institutions that bring in a lot of talent from other places. And we want to be the place that kind of reminds people that we’ve got homegrown talent, too.”
A press release says that the arts center will focus on three main goals: showcasing the work of local artists and organizations, inspiring connection and collaboration across the arts scene, and activating public space with art that everyone can enjoy.
Tampa Arts Alliance (which recently did its part to help Artspace open affordable housing in Ybor City) plans to open in downtown Tampa come March 2026—but moving in is not necessarily a give-in.
Smith said Farley White Interests wants her group to build the space out so that it matches the rest of the 44-year-old, 281,187-square-foot Class A tower and becomes an amenity for downtown itself.