SMART Project Space (SPS or SMART) was a publicly funded foundation for Contemporary Art founded in 1994 by the innovative cultural mediator Thomas Peutz. SPS closed its innovative exhibition programme in 2013, but remains a creative industries incubator, offering studio space to artists currently under the remit of SMART Estate Incorporation. Located in the old west of Amsterdam, SMART Project Space was a pioneering institution. It put the artist at the core of its programmes and sought stimulating and new relationships between the artist and the wider community. SMART commissioned, produced, and showcased some 70 contemporary visual art exhibitions, hosted hundreds of films, music and performance events, drawing together a wide range of creative approaches across disciplines.
SMART developed different platforms of artistic production and creative research - visual arts, to music and film, design and architecture and social art practice. It was an artistic community embedded in its neighbourhood, a laboratory for creative research and activity, and a research centre alternative to the existing institutional structures.
SMART was publicly funded by the Mondriaan Foundation, City of Amsterdam; Bureau Broedplaatsen, Stichting DOEN, The Netherlands Film Fund, Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds, VSBfonds, Amsterdam Fund for the Arts, Culture Ireland.
SMART Project Space, Centre for Contemporary Art was founded as an alternative art space in 1994 by Thomas Peutz. It was first located in the centre of the city on the Kloveniersburgwal, number 7. SMART moved further along the street in 1997 to the so-called Bushuis at number 48 (now a library of the University of Amsterdam) where it began to organise events alongside its exhibition activities. In 2000 SMART relocated to the extensive disused laboratory building of the former Jan Swammerdam Institute of the University on the 1e Constantijn Huygensstraat. The experimental arts programme developed into a mix of exhibition, cinema, music and performance and was a creative hive of activity. There were 44 studios on the upper two floors rented to artists, musicians, tech start ups, designers and architects, an exhibition space, a cinema and the hip media cafe/restaurant De Ruimte (the space) owned by the Hip Hop cafe De Duivel. After opening its doors it became a hub for artists, filmmakers, designers, TV presenters and anyone who wanted in on the scene. SMART was the first exhibition venue to open its doors 7 days per week until late. It grew to become one of the hippest cultural venues in the city and was the heart of the creative industries in the early 2000s. After a two-year struggle with the Local city Council to keep the building, Thomas Peutz developed one of the first major capital development projects. In 2004 SMART relocated one final time to the Pathological Anatomical Laboratory from the 1930s (PAL) in the Old West neighborhood of Amsterdam which is known for its diverse and eclectic ethnic and artistic community. Thomas Peutz established SMART Estate Incorporation, bringing together investors to make the purchase of the building possible. The re-development was fully finished in 2008. There are four levels separated according to function. Artist studios and administrative office space are on the top floor. 600 m2 of exhibition space, including a main space and a smaller project space are on the first floor. An auditorium, two cinemas and a café/restaurant, LAB111, which is accessed through the main lobby. Lab111 was awarded a "9+" score by "notoriously finicky food critic Johannes van Dam."