Hurricane Helene Creative Sector Impact: 2024 WNC Creatives Needs Assessment Summary
The WNC Creatives Needs Assessment (October 2024) reveals the severe toll Hurricane Helene took on the region’s arts and culture sector. Based on 460 responses from 17 counties—including the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians—the data outlines devastating losses, particularly among artists in Buncombe County and Asheville’s River Arts District. Respondents reported destroyed studios, lost equipment and inventory, canceled events, and major disruptions to income and tourism-driven sales.
Visual and craft artists, musicians, theater professionals, artisan businesses, galleries, and community arts organizations all highlighted urgent financial needs. Over 230 creatives cited lack of income or work as their top concern, followed by assistance with bills, supplies, housing repairs, and food security.
Long-term recovery priorities include rebuilding creative spaces, replacing lost tools and materials, and reviving the region’s tourism-dependent arts economy. Notably, 41% of respondents had not applied for any aid due to connectivity issues and lack of access to resources.
The report calls for increased emergency grant access, technical assistance, and collaborative efforts among local governments, nonprofits, and businesses to ensure a sustainable and resilient creative sector.
RELATED REPORTS
Creative Sector Survey Reveals Top Support Needs for Artists in Western North Carolina
2025 survey of 358 WNC creatives reveals top support needs—financial aid, marketing, space access—as artists recover and rebuild after Hurricane Helene.
Interactive Map of Arts and Culture Assets in Buncombe County Impacted by Hurricane Helene
Map of 573 arts and culture assets in Buncombe County impacted by Hurricane Helene. Updated quarterly to track recovery and resilience across the sector.
WNC Arts Relief: Hurricane Helene’s Impact on the Creative Economy and the Road to Recovery
Hurricane Helene devastated WNC’s arts sector. Learn how ArtsAVL is leading recovery with emergency grants, business aid, and creative workforce support.