Our Houses
As a certified member of the New Hampshire Coalition of Recovery Residences, we are committed to upholding the highest standards of practice.
In 2022, 94 male and female residents graduated from our homes with a successful completion, moving on to independent living or returning to their respective homes as contributing members of our local community.
We know that our houses play a vital role in transitioning individuals to independent living. It’s important to us that people feel like they’re at home.
Many of our residents come to us from treatment centers, unstable home environments, or have been living on the streets. For some, this is the first space they get to call “their own,” but we know that it is not a house that makes a home… it is the people inside it.
Click on any of the photos to get a glimpse into what it is like to live in our houses.
Want to see how individual residents cozy up their own spaces of their homes?
Sober Living for Women
This is where our female residents take part in a 12-step-based program where we support personal accountability in a family-style atmosphere. We are MAT-friendly, meaning we are able to support various pathways toward long-term and sustained recovery - ALL with the same guiding 12-step principles! These women’s houses are the first step in bridging the gap between treatment and independent living.
Sober Living for Men
This is where our male residents take part in a 12-step-based program where we support personal accountability in a family-style atmosphere. We are MAT-friendly, meaning we are able to support various pathways toward long-term and sustained recovery - ALL with the same guiding 12-step principles! These men’s houses are the first step in bridging the gap between treatment and independent living.
Men’s Step-Down House
This house is for the men ready to take that next step towards independent living. While more independence and less accountabilities can be scary for some, this is where they can really get out into the community and make connections with others outside of the house. This is the final step in bridging the gap between treatment and independent living.