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ChurchSpace Raises $1.2M, Moves HQ to Detroit, and Partners with City to Transform Churches into Economic Engines

ChurchSpace Raises $1.2M, Moves HQ to Detroit, and Partners with City to Transform Churches into Economic Engines

May 16, 2025 Craig Etkin

DETROIT, May 5, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — In a bold move blending faith, innovation, and economic revitalization, ChurchSpace has announced the close of a $1.2 million oversubscribed funding round, led by Black Ops Ventures, with additional participation from Dug Song of Minor Capital and Michigan Rise.

The startup is also relocating its national headquarters from Houston, Texas, to Detroit, Michigan — a city known for its rich spiritual legacy and entrepreneurial spirit — to deepen its mission of activating underutilized sacred spaces for modern-day community use.

As part of its national growth, CmurchSpace has also launched a historic partnership with the City of Detroit. This groundbreaking initiative will activate church campuses across Detroit not only as flexible event spaces and business hubs but also as micro-logistics and last-mile delivery centers — positioning churches as powerful engines of economic development, job creation, and community support.

“This raise is more than a business milestone—it’s a testament to what happens when strategy meets faith. In today’s climate, raising capital takes grit and resilience—especially without deep networks or traditional access. By God’s grace, doors have opened, and our mission is clearer than ever. Now, with capital in hand, we’re building boldly toward a future where the Church isn’t just surviving—but leading community transformation. We’re deeply grateful to our investors, supporters, champions, and our incredible team,” said Emmanuel Brown, Co-CEO of ChurchSpace.

“What we built in Houston was more than technology—it was transformation. We expanded our purpose and packaged proven strategies to help churches thrive, transform communities, and even combat food insecurity. Now, with prayer and the support of our team and investors, we’re bringing that same impact to Detroit—to help churches, communities, and small businesses redefine pulpits and rediscover communal possibilities,” said Day Edwards, Founder of ChurchSpace.

Through this new model, ChurchSpace is equipping churches to host local businesses, pop-up markets, and community events while also serving as fulfillment hubs for food distribution, retail partnerships, and last-mile delivery services. By using existing, often underutilized real estate inside church campuses — such as fellowship halls, kitchens, and classrooms — ChurchSpace unlocks new streams of passive income for churches while helping small businesses reach local consumers faster and more affordably.

Already, churches on the ChurchSpace platform in Texas have generated up to $100,000 annually in new revenue—funds that have been reinvested into ministries, food programs, and community initiatives. In Detroit, ChurchSpace projects hundreds of direct and indirect jobs will be created in logistics support, delivery management, event hosting, and technical services.

Mayor Mike Duggan praised the partnership, noting the longstanding role churches have played in Detroit’s community fabric.

“We welcome ChurchSpace’s investment in Detroit and the jobs and innovation it will bring. Our faith community has long been a critical backbone of our neighborhoods. Through ChurchSpace’s groundbreaking work, they will continue to be anchors of opportunity and resilience in our city’s future,” said Mayor Mike Duggan.

Investors also praised the vision behind ChurchSpace’s mission:

“From Motown to ministry, Detroit’s always had soul. ChurchSpace is bringing fresh tech to sacred spaces—helping churches thrive, serve, and connect across communities. We’re proud to support their mission and welcome them to Detroit,” said Dug Song, of Minor Capital.

“ChurchSpace is leveraging technology and network effects to transform underutilized space into a powerful resource for communities. We’re thrilled to support their growth, especially as they start making an impact in Michigan,” said Pete Martin, Director of Portfolio Management at Michigan Rise.

“This investment is about more than scaling a platform—it’s about scaling hope, resilience, and opportunity at the neighborhood level. ChurchSpace is exactly the kind of visionary innovation Black Ops Ventures is proud to back,” said Antonia Dean, Principal at Black Ops Ventures.

Churches across Detroit are invited to apply to participate in the pilot program. Selected churches will be onboarded, equipped with new tools for space sharing, revenue generation, and logistics support, and will play a key role in building Detroit’s next chapter of faith-powered economic growth.

To kick off the launch, ChurchSpace will host its Detroit Pastor Meetup on July 19, 2025 — an invitation-only lunch and learn event for pastors and church administrators to learn about ChurchSpace’s model, share their needs, and begin building customized community solutions.

Interested churches can RSVP here:
 RSVP LINK

About ChurchSpace
 ChurchSpace is a tech startup building smart solutions for shared space and logistics through underutilized community infrastructure, helping churches transform their available real estate into purpose-filled spaces for businesses and the community.

Learn more: 

[www.bookchurchspace.com]

Press Contact:
Sophie@bookchurchspace.com

SOURCE ChurchSpace Inc.

Copyright © 2025 Cision US Inc.


Venture Capital
ChurchSpace, Cision, Detroit, Michigan, PRNewswire, Venture Capital

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AI might be great at helping engineers write code, but it’s creating a new problem – all that code still needs to be reviewed by humans. CodeAnt AI is stepping in with a solution that uses AI to tackle the review process itself, raising $2 million in seed funding to help engineering teams move faster without sacrificing quality or security. The funding, CodeAnt AI’s first institutional round, values the company at $20 million. It will be used to expand the engineering and business development teams and to scale CodeAnt AI’s code quality and application security platform. For engineering teams already feeling the pressure to ship faster, the investment comes at the perfect time. The funding round was led by Y Combinator, VitalStage Ventures, and Uncorrelated Ventures, and with participation from DeVC, Transpose Platform, Entrepreneur First, and a number of marquee angel investors.

In a statement, Amartya Jha, Co-founder and CEO of CodeAnt AI said, “As AI-driven coding becomes widespread, the real bottleneck isn’t writing code — it’s reviewing it,” “Today, when a developer submits a change request, it often sits idle for hours or even days waiting for peer review. And even when a reviewer does pick it up, they rarely have full context of the code change. This is a critical risk point: most software bugs and vulnerabilities slip through at the peer review stage, where issues could have been caught early and cheaply.”

As AI continues to transform how code gets written, CodeAnt AI is positioning itself as the bridge to a future where code can be both rapidly created and confidently deployed. The founders envision a world where AI doesn’t just help developers write code faster, but also ensures that every line shipped to production is secure, efficient, and ready for the real world – giving engineering teams the confidence to move at the speed their businesses demand.
Source: http://go.intelligence360.io/ and https://intelligence360.news/

Building on its 120-year tradition of caring for Northern Californians, Sutter Health today announced a transformational plan to expand access to its comprehensive, integrated and coordinated high-quality care across the greater East Bay region. As part of this phased approach, Sutter will construct a flagship campus in the City of Emeryville featuring a regional destination ambulatory care complex and a new medical center with an initial capacity of up to 200 beds and room for future expansion. The plan prioritizes recruiting primary care and specialty physicians, reducing barriers for patients when scheduling appointments and obtaining referrals for care, and investing in programs and partnerships to strengthen the healthcare workforce.  

In a statement Warner Thomas, president and CEO of Sutter Health said, “Our Emeryville campus project represents one of the most significant investments we’re making across our system over the next decade and is part of our broader vision to meet the community’s growing demand for expanded access to our services across the East Bay footprint,” “Too many people face challenges in accessing the care they need. At Sutter, we’re committed to breaking down those barriers—expanding care facilities, enhancing imaging capabilities, improving online appointment scheduling and collaborating with the Sutter East Bay Medical Group and our community physician partners to attract more primary and specialty care physicians. 

 
Sutter is investing more than $1 billion to expand services across the East Bay, ensuring patients will be able to conveniently reach comprehensive care within a 15-minute drive from home or work. At the heart of this regional expansion is the newly acquired, 12-acre Sutter Emeryville Campus at Horton and 53rd streets, which will serve as a key healthcare destination.  When complete, the approximately 1.3 million square foot, new medical campus in the heart of Emeryville, will offer outpatient services at two existing buildings totaling approximately 530,000 square feet, at 5555 Hollis Street and 5300 Chiron Street, plus acute care services at a newly constructed medical center adjacent to the Hollis Street property. The Sutter Emeryville campus will also offer medical office space and parking at an existing 1,992-space parking garage.
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Saica Group will begin construction this month on a $110 million expansion project in Anderson Indiana. Saica Group is one of the largest and most advanced European players in the development and production of recycled paper for corrugated packaging. Saica expects to start operations during Q4 2026 and plans to create more than 50 well-paid full-time jobs during the first two years of operation and more than 100 after the facility has completed its ramp-up phase some years after the startup. Designed with future growth in mind, the new facility will have almost 350,000-square-feet and will include manufacturing, converting and production areas, along with a warehouse and office space. 

In a statement Susana Alejandro, President and CEO of Saica Group, said: “Saica is committed to stability and long-term growth in the US. This investment is the proof that we are moving forward with our plans in the American continent as we are convinced that we can provide products that will differentiate us in a crowded market. It reflects our deep commitment to delivering exceptional service, as we believe our knowledge and experience in the production of recycled lightweight papers and corrugated packaging will bring high performance packaging to the US market while becoming more efficient in the use of materials”. 

Saica Group has been in business since 1943 and has a long track record of stable growth in the production of recycled paper and the packaging industry. Saica Group is a family-owned multinational company that cares about people, their well-being and their professional development. Currently the company employs more than 12,000 employees and has a revenue of 3.963 Billion dollars.
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