“A Nu Kulture exists to close access gaps by transforming everyday community spaces into safe, structured, walkable environments that expand digital access, support learning, nurture creativity, and enhance community connection.”

It’s Not Ability…It’s Proximity

🔹 The Problem

Across our communities, families are navigating:

  • Transportation deserts

  • Digital deserts

  • Limited access to libraries and enrichment spaces

Even when better schools exist, students without access to:

  • After-school programs

  • STEAM resources

  • Cultural and creative outlets

fall behind—not because of potential, but because of access.

🔹 The Solution

A Nu Kulture is changing that.

We create walkable, community-based learning hubs by activating UNDERUTILIZED spaces into resource-rich environments equipped with:

  • STEAM tools and materials

  • Library and literacy resources

  • Media, music, and creative spaces

  • Homeschool and academic support

All accessible through a shared, membership-based model designed for sustainability.


Who We Partner With

We’re building partnerships with community spaces, educators, organizations, and aligned mission partners to bring accessible, neighborhood-based hubs to life—starting locally and growing over time. Learn More about becoming our next partner.

Pitch Deck/ Flyer & Handouts [Click Below]

Why Partner With Us

Partnership means more than visibility—it means collaboration.

Early partners have the opportunity to:

  • Help shape how the model is implemented

  • Align with a growing, community-rooted initiative

  • Build authentic presence within the communities they serve

  • Contribute to a foundation designed for long-term scale

“We envision a future where every community has walkable access to the resources, spaces, and support needed to learn, create, and thrive.”

Meet the Founder

Success is not just ability—its proximity.

Kenya Arnold is a social entrepreneur and visionary focused on reimagining access within underserved communities. After raising children in a rapidly changing city, she recognized a growing disconnect between families and modern learning, digital, and creative opportunities.

While studying Social Entrepreneurship, she became deeply interested in urban planning, walkable infrastructure, digital inclusion, and the role community spaces play in neighborhood development. She saw how transportation barriers, digital deserts, and the loss of accessible community-centered spaces continued to widen opportunity gaps for families.

In response, she created A Nu Kulture Hub—an infrastructure model designed to bring learning, creativity, technology, and connection closer to where people already live.

A Nu Kulture Hub — Bringing Access Closer to Home.