Community Corner

Mayor Walsh to Open New Homeless Shelter in Boston

Shelter will provide a pathway to permanent housing for over 400 homeless individuals.

A new shelter for the homeless will soon be open in the city of Boston.

Mayor Marty Walsh, in conjunction with Chief of Health and Human Services, Felix G. Arroyo, and Interim Public Health Commissioner, Dr. Huy Nguyen, announced Monday that the Southhampton Street Shelter will open up on Thursday, June 25.

The shelter, which will be located on 112 Southhampton Street, is designed to provide a pathway to permanent housing for over 400 homeless individuals.

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Just the first floor of the building will be opened, however. 100 beds were added to the shelter’s first floor in January. 150 beds were brought in back in April. An additional 150 more beds will available when the first floor officially opens on Thursday at 11 a.m.

A third phase to the project is scheduled to be completed later this year. It will add a kitchen and clinic space to the shelter.

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The renovated building will provide space for both an emergency shelter and the city’s transitional housing programs. The reopening of the shelter will restore the services that the city offered before the Long Island Bridge closure.

Temporary shelter beds located at the South End Fitness Center, Boston Rescue Mission and Boston’s Healthcare for the Homeless, will be closed later this week.

Photo Credit: Metro.US

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