Activity planning for your community center: plan a full year
Start with an annual calendar
The first step in creating an annual plan is an empty calendar. Mark the fixed dates first:
- National holidays (King's Day, Sinterklaas, Christmas, New Year’s Eve)
- School holidays. Many parents and children are available then, or not
- Local events (funfair, village festival, sports tournaments)
- Fixed tenants; which groups use the space regularly?
Around these anchor points you build your own programme. This helps prevent planning a large event on a day when half the community is on holiday or double-booking a space.
Types of activities: a mix works best
A varied programme appeals to more people. Think of categories:
Social and meetups
Coffee mornings, bingo, an older people’s social club, cooking together, game night. These activities are accessible, regularly recurring and create connection.
Educational and developmental
Workshops, courses, lectures, computer help for seniors. People come for the content—and for the social interaction around it.
Culture and creativity
Painting course, music, theatre group, film or book club. Creative activities attract a different audience and help establish regular, recurring groups.
Sport and movement
Yoga, tai chi, dancing, a walking group. Easy to join, good for health and well suited to both older people and young families.
Events
Annual highlights: the village festival, a cycling ride, a neighbourhood quiz or a Christmas dinner. These events require more preparation but are good for visibility.
How do you come up with new ideas?
Simply ask your visitors. A short survey, an ideas board at the entrance or a chat during the coffee morning yields more usable input than a brainstorm session by the board alone. Also look at what works in other community centres in the region. There is no reason to reinvent the wheel.
Also consider collaboration: a library, a care organisation, a school or a sports club can be a partner for activities. That saves costs and broadens reach.
Funding for activities
Not all activities are cost-free to organise. Think about how you cover the costs:
- Participant contribution: A small contribution per participant makes activities affordable and helps filter out who really wants to come
- Subsidies: Many municipalities have pots for social or cultural activities. Check with the neighbourhood team
- Sponsoring: Local businesses can contribute in exchange for publicity
- Funds: VSBfonds, Oranjefonds and local funds support neighbourhood initiatives
Communication: fill the venue
The best activity is worthless if no one knows about it. Plan your communications as part of the annual planning:
- Make a seasonal programme booklet (print + digital)
- Publish a monthly newsletter
- Use Facebook or Instagram for local reach
- Put up posters in the supermarket, the library and at the GP surgery
- Ensure an up-to-date calendar on your website
Evaluation and adjustment
After every quarter you evaluate: which activities were well attended, which not? What was the reason? Adjust the annual plan based on what you learn. An activity offering is never finished. It is a living document that grows with the needs of the neighbourhood.