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A93-year-old woman experiencing chronic homelessness recently found permanent housing with the help of case managers at a new shelter and social services facility that opened in Center City.
Workers at the Hope 220 at 220 North Broad St. also recently helped another woman reconnect with her family and another access her late husband’s death benefits.
“A lot of our folks are coming in and they just need to rest, and we’ve built what we really believe is a comfortable, dignified and beautiful space for them to do that,” said Katie Barnhart, of the Salvation Army, which the city has contracted with to run the facility. “And then, once the dust has settled, ‘What is it that you need to help you move on to the next point of your life?'”
The 92-bed facility, which opened in mid-January at the former Hahnemann University Hospital site, is part of Mayor Cherelle Parker’s initiative to add 1,000 shelter beds. The 2025 Point-in-Time count identified 1,612 people experiencing chronic homelessness, up 50% from 1,080 in 2024.
The city’s Office of Homeless Services is referring people to Hope 220 primarily through its intake centers. In addition to being a “soft-landing” place and meeting people’s immediate needs – shelter, clothing, food – Hope 220 offers wrap-around services in a “one-stop shop,” said Barnhart, assistant director of Philadelphia Social Service Ministries for the Salvation Army.
City of Philadelphia