Provides overnight shelter to youth ages 18 to 24. Sign-up during drop-in hours at Rosie's Place or visit shelter when it opens. Adds more beds during cold weather.
Provides a low barrier overnight shelter to youth.
Typically, 18 beds are available for participants as well as two crisis beds. Shelter beds are assigned based on vulnerability, yet overnight staff do their best to accommodate all young people who need a place to sleep. More beds become available in cold weather.
Offers access to immediate help and safety for youth ages 12-17 in crisis. A youth may call the hotline or visit a facility displaying the Safe Place sign to request help, such as reconnecting with a parent/guardian or finding shelter.
Provides on call, in person and over the phone support to vulnerable youth. Works closely with existing emergency youth shelter providers including Friends of Youth, YouthCare and Cocoon House.
Current Safe Place sites include: Metro Transit buses, YMCAs of Greater Seattle and the King County Library System. A complete map of all Safe Place locations can be seen online.
Coordinates a network of volunteers that care for children of parents in crisis. Provides a safe alternative to child welfare custody. Crises include short-term emergencies, such as hospitalization, or a longer-term crisis, such as drug abuse or homelessness.
Coordinates a network of volunteers that care for children of parents experiencing a temporary crisis.
Provides a safe alternative to child welfare custody. Crises include short-term emergencies, such as hospitalization, or a longer-term crisis, such as drug abuse or homelessness.
Volunteer families are extensively screened and supported, and biological parents maintain full custody while their children are in the program. The ultimate goal is to support and strengthen biological families so they can become safe families for their own children.
Host family volunteers are supervised by their area church, which in turn is supported by professional child care specialists.
Children are matched with families in their own community whenever possible, and placements average from one day to three months.
Provides space and support for youth ages 12-17 to find a path to safe and stable permanent housing. Offers resources for temporary residence, assessment, referrals, and permanency planning for all youth in crisis.
Serves youth ages 12-17 experiencing homelessness. Provides space and support to find a path to safe and stable permanent housing. To prevent teen homelessness, The LOFT provides resources for temporary residence, assessment, referrals, and permanency planning for all youth in crisis.
Provides mentorship, transitional housing, and one-bedroom apartments for young adults 18-24 year of age looking to better their lives.
Provides advocacy, housing support, life skills training, and employment opportunities to young adults ages 18-24 facing challenges such as homelessness, mental health struggles, and justice-involvement.
Operates a 4 bedroom dorm-style facility with 3 beds per room that accommodates male/female/LGBT+ young adults who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.
Operates a shelter and drop-in for young adults ages 18-24. Provides residents with lockers, showers, laundry, and clothing. Offers meals to any youth who comes during mealtimes. Operates as a youth cooling center during heat advisories.
Operates a homeless youth engagement center with both day and night services. Offers:
- Warm meals for breakfast, lunch, and dinner (do not have to be shelter resident for meals)
- Hygiene supplies including lockers, showers, laundry, and clothing
- Day shelter beds
- Case managers who work with young people to reduce barriers and set goals for long-term housing
- Onsite mental health counseling
- Overnight shelter
- Youth cooling center during heat advisories.
Crisis residential center for youth, age 12-17. 10-bed facility. Referrals from law enforcement, schools, courts, DCYF case workers, and youth can self-refer. Daytime hours: parents, kids, or others involved can call. After hours/weekends: see details.
Offers a co-educational, crisis residential shelter for youth from age 12 to 17.
Open for intake 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Referrals are made through DCYF caseworkers, law enforcement, community providers and Specialized Foster Care at Community Youth Services.
Youth who are facing homelessness may call Haven House directly to refer themselves for emergency shelter. Self-referring youth must be willing to follow basic program rules and expectations.
Provides emergency shelter for young adults ages 18-26 daily. Serves breakfast the following morning. Must provide ID or a letter from a case manager within a week.
Provides a 35-bed low-barrier shelter that offers individual spaces to young adults looking for a safe place to stay. We have 13 "Night by Night" spots and 22 "Resident" spots.
Night-by-Night spots are first-come-first-serve based on daily signups. Sign-up in person, or by calling.
Clients must be actively staying in Night-by-Night shelter to get on the Resident Waitlist. Residents have a guaranteed spot every night and can leave their belongings in their pod. Folks can keep the Resident Pod as long as they need, as long as they are following expectations.
Shelter guests are served dinner every night and provided snacks at the start of shelter hours.
On M-F, mornings, Shelter and guests may go downstairs until 11am to enjoy a hot breakfast.
On Sa & Su, mornings, Shelter, and breakfast bags are handed out.
Offers daytime drop-in center for ages 12-24, including counseling, resources, food, showers and laundry services. Overnight emergency shelter available for ages 18-24. Operates as a youth cooling center during weather advisories.
Drop-In Center & Resources:
The drop-in center provides teens and young adults a safe place to stay during the day to do homework, play games, socialize, work on personal goals or employment, or relax. Young people can also get a hot meal, talk to a caseworker, and get help with resources such as bus tickets or access to showers and laundry facilities. Arcadia staff can also provide referrals to employment training, educational assistance, mental health and substance use counseling, and other services. Operates as a cooling center during weather advisories.
Overnight Emergency Shelter:
The drop-in center transforms into an overnight emergency shelter where young adults are encouraged to have a hot meal, do laundry, play video games, relax, and get some sleep in a warm and safe environment.
Provides short-term overnight shelter for 30 homeless and street dependent youth attempting to make changes in their lives. Youth may access clothing, medical assistance, and employment education support.
Provides short-term overnight shelter, two meals per day and cleanup facilities for 30 homeless and street dependent youth attempting to make changes in their lives. Youth may access clothing, medical assistance, and employment education support.
Operates nightly shelter for young adults. Services at the shelter include dinner and hot breakfast as well as case management and visits by health care providers.
Operates overnight shelter for young adults. Provides clients with:
- Clean bedding and sheets.
- Dinner and hot breakfast.
- Laundry.
- Showers.
- Health and hygiene supplies.
- On-site case management.
- Referral to other support and transitional services.
- Visits by health care providers, including a public health nurse, and mental health services.
- Educational materials related to risk avoidance and harm reduction.
Oak Bridge Youth Shelter serves youth who are homeless, who have run away, who are victims of sex trafficking, or those at risk of homelessness or other harm.
Serves youth who have run away, are experiencing homelessness, or are otherwise in need of temporary shelter. Family reconciliation is emphasized when appropriate. Length of stay varies based on individual need. Crisis intervention, information and referral services, and case management are also available.
Provides safe and stable housing for Mason County youth ages 18-24 through shelter homes, transitional programs, rental assistance, and eviction prevention. Youth meet with staff to determine the best housing program for their needs.
Provide youth with safe and stable housing through shelter homes, transitional programs, rental assistance, and eviction prevention designed to meet immediate needs while helping youth build long-term stability and independence.
After a coordinated entry assessment, places youth in one of six off-site shelter homes or in a housing program with a partner agency.
Provides short-term emergency shelter for homeless and runaway youths ages 7-17 for up to 21 days. Accepts self-referrals or youth referred by the state child welfare system. Call for pre-screening.
Emergency shelter and transitional living which serves youth ages 7 - 17 with case management, life skills and education supports, recreational outings and focuses on housing stability and family reunification whenever possible.
Provides safe and stable housing for Mason County youth ages 18-24 through shelter homes, transitional programs, rental assistance, and eviction prevention. Youth meet with staff to determine the best housing program for their needs.
Provide youth with safe and stable housing through shelter homes, transitional programs, rental assistance, and eviction prevention designed to meet immediate needs while helping youth build long-term stability and independence.
After a coordinated entry assessment, places youth in one of six off-site shelter homes or in a housing program with a partner agency.
Provides youth in crisis with a place for physical and emotional safety while assisting them in developing life skills that will enable them to make positive contributions in their communities.
Provides youth in crisis with a place for physical and emotional safety while assisting them in developing life skills that will enable them to make positive contributions in their communities.
Provides services for homeless youth ages 13 to 17.
Provides shelter for homeless teens ages 16-20, as well as food, clothing, and comprehensive case management services. Also assists youth in obtaining an ID, birth certificate, social security card, health insurance, etc. Our drop-in center serves youth and young adults from 13 - 20. These services include showers, food, toiletries, clothing vouchers, and more. We are a warming center for youth during inclement weather.
Provides shelter, food, showers, laundry, clothing, and hygiene materials as well as case management, behavioral health, employment services, and housing navigation for young adults ages 18-24 without children. Operates as a cooling center during weather advisories.
Young adult drop-in and overnight shelter services operate 24 hours a day, providing a safe and supportive environment for clients. Guests have access to meals, showers, laundry, hygiene supplies, clothing, laptops/Wi-Fi, TV/video games, a library/art/game room, an outdoor basketball court, and a medical clinic (which is staffed weekly). On-site services include housing navigation, employment support, behavioral health therapy, substance abuse counseling, and other resource referrals.
The shelter space has 23 individual cubes (with half walls for privacy) and three Murphy beds. During severe weather activations, our shelter expands to shelter 35 guests nightly. Guests are also provided with overnight storage for their personal belongings.
Provides a group shelter for youth ages 12-17 who are homeless or at imminent risk of homelessness. Maximum stay is 30 days.
The South King County Youth Shelter (SKYS) is a licensed group home serving homeless, runaway, and at-risk youth aged 12-17. SKYS offers basic needs assistance, community resource referrals, in-house case management, family reunification support, education and employment assistance, and permanency planning. Young people stay for varying durations, from 21 days in federally funded basic center beds to up to 90 days in Office of Homeless Youth Hope Beds or Transitional Living placements for youth aged 16+ from intake to their 18th birthday.
Operates a four-bed shelter where young adults can stay for up to 90 days.
Operates two youth shelters, one located in Bellingham and another in Mount Vernon. Whatcom location offers four beds where young adults can stay for up to 90 days. Skagit location offers three beds where young adults can stay for up to 6 months. Provides food, a bed, showers, and staff support. Youth work with a case manager to evaluate their longer-term housing options. Youth also have access to other agency support services such as employment and education support.
This is not an immediate, emergency shelter. There is a waiting list.
Provides emergency shelter for young adults, 18-24 years of age.
Provides emergency shelter for youth, 18-24 years of age.Youth staying at the shelter may receive assistance with basic necessities, education support, employment support, housing support, and behavioral health services.
Operates a four-bed shelter where young adults can stay for up to 90 days.
Operates two youth shelters, one located in Bellingham and another in Mount Vernon. Whatcom location offers four beds where young adults can stay for up to 90 days. Skagit location offers three beds where young adults can stay for up to 6 months. Provides food, a bed, showers, and staff support. Youth work with a case manager to evaluate their longer-term housing options. Youth also have access to other agency support services such as employment and education support.
This is not an immediate, emergency shelter. There is a waiting list.
Operates a shelter for adults ages 18-24 providing beds, meals, showers, and clothing. Offers case management and support to help young adults connect to permanent housing. Serves as the coordinated entry point for youth.
Operates a shelter for youth adults with beds, meals, showers, and clothing. Provides case management and support to help young adults access permanent housing. Serves as the coordinated entry access point for youth. Offers clients:
- Independent Living Skills: Financial literacy, tenant rights, and job readiness are taught through our Life Enrichment Program.
- Housing Support: Assistance with housing applications, lease signing, move-in deposits, and securing low-income housing options.
- Employment and Education Resources: Partnerships with Spokane Community College, Job Corps, and local trade programs provide access to training and job opportunities.
- Health and Wellness Advocacy: On-site behavioral health clinicians and street medicine teams ensure participants receive compassionate, coordinated care.
- Family Reunification: Personalized plans help participants rebuild relationships with loved ones when possible.