An Achievement of Note
Editorial
When Bob Bolduc sold his hugely successful chain of Pride stations and stores a few years ago, people wondered what the entrepreneur, philanthropist, and BusinessWest Difference Maker would do next. They didn’t have to wait long for the answer.
It came in the form of Hope for Youth & Families, a foundation into which Bolduc has put the same intense drive and attention to detail as his business. In three short years, the family foundation has made progress with its three stated points of focus — literacy, helping young people find paths to a college education, and the arts.
And it is in the last category that the foundation has made its most visible, and potentially most impactful, contribution, with the creation of the Hope Center for the Arts in the former CityStage space in downtown Springfield (see story on page 4).
CityStage has been dormant for many years now, and the stunning transformation into the Hope Center for the Arts reactivates that space in a powerful way. But this is about much more than turning the stage lights back on at that theater — although that has been accomplished as well.
Bolduc and others at the foundation realized early on that they could do a lot more than bring CityStage online. They could create a true learning and performance center, where young people could become immersed in everything from dance to theater; music to photography; creative writing to visual arts.
And that’s what has been created in the various spaces at the center, into which the foundation has poured more than $15 million, by Bolduc’s estimates, for everything from new HVAC systems to a teen café and lounge to a revamped main stage that is state of the art in every way.
Bolduc likes to say he’s not making these investments in equipment or infrastructure or lighting. He’s making them in young people. Several generations of young people.
And he’s right. Because while the new stage might produce rich sound and intense lighting, what it and the other facilities at the center ultimately do is help educate young people and, through the arts, inspire them to reach higher, pursue excellence, unlock talent, and perhaps even find a career.
They might possibly have done all that without the Hope Center for the Arts, but this new facility, clearly one of the better and more inspiring stories unfolding in Springfield, makes it exponentially easier.
Bolduc says he hopes the new center changes the trajectory of many young lives in Springfield. We believe it will.





