Why Housing that Heals

We build community. Housing is our platform, rather than our highest outcome.

But housing matters. For people healing from homelessness, it matters even more how it’s done.

Three Connected Challenges

Homelessness

Over half a million Americans go homeless on a single night in the United States, and over four thousand in Denver. Thousands more face severe housing uncertainty.

(un)Affordability

Denver rents increased 85% in the past decade and 15% in the past year. An average-priced 2-bedroom apartment in Denver requires an annual salary of $88k.

Isolation

As society fragments, many of us do not experience connecting bonds of community within the places where we live. For those on the edge, this can be devastating.

Whats behind the crisis?

More than a roof and walls… with our neighbors, we can reweave a fabric of community

in which all can thrive. Children can grow up with a different trajectory. How?

Three Essential Elements

Healing-Centered

Trauma is both a cause and an effect of homelessness. We nurture communities that are welcoming, safe, and stable. Residents heal in a shared culture of caring.

Liberating

Our communities include a rich array of services in support of people working toward their own aspirations. Our residents’ gifts are the drivers of transformation.

Peacemaking

Our faith-language term for this is Shalom—personal and social flourishing. Residents become neighbors and friends. Challenges are shared and success is interwoven.

What’s healing centered housing?