Rebuilding lives, celebrating creativity, strengthening community.
-

COMMUNITY ARTS PROGRAM
Since 1969, the Community Arts Program (CAP) has offered the City’s only free studio and gallery space dedicated to uplifting hundreds of talented low-income artists as they create, exhibit, and sell artwork. Additionally, we host monthly exhibitions and themed shows where participating artists keep 100% of the proceeds from their art sales - making our program a unique social enterprise.
Location: 1009 Market St.
Phone: (415) 553-4525 ext. 301 -
COMMUNITY BUILDING PROGRAM
Our Community Building Program (CBP) is a vital hub for civic engagement, leadership development, and community support. Our signature training series, Healing, Organizing & Leadership Development (HOLD), we provides trauma-informed leadership development to help residents heal from the impacts of poverty. Our voter engagement activities, including the 'Walk With Windy' event, brought hundreds of residents to City Hall to vote. The 'Committed to Change' group continues to support more than 115 formerly incarcerated members annually.
Location: 290 Turk St.
Phone: (415) 749-2122 -

EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM
The Employment Program at Hospitality House offers options for gainful employment and increased stability by helping community residents remove barriers to employment, secure living wage jobs, and pursue career options. We connect homeless and low-income job seekers to employers through hiring and job fairs, as well as expanded support services, job seeker support groups, and partnerships with employers, workforce, and employment agencies. Our Tenderloin Neighborhood Job Center helps more than 300 low-income and homeless job-seekers gain full and part-time employment every year.
Location: 259 Hyde St.
Phone: (415) 718-1929 -
SHELTER PROGRAM
Hospitality House Shelter Program is one of the City’s oldest and smallest emergency shelters for up to 22 men nightly. Throughout the year, 18 former shelter residents moved into permanent housing, and nearly 60 current or former residents obtained income support through public assistance or gainful full/part-time employment. Three years ago, Hospitality House moved a cohort of 21 residents into the same permanent supportive housing community. Three years later, 20 of 21 residents are still housed - supported with wellness checks, engagement opportunities, and ongoing connections.
Location: 146 Leavenworth St. (2nd Fl)
Phone: (415) 749-2103 -

SIXTH STREET SELF-HELP CENTER
The Sixth Street Self-Help Center offers a range of emergency, behavioral health, and support services, including peer counseling, case management, housing referrals, income support, mental health and substance use resources, individual and group therapy, social engagement, and access to basic amenities. Like our flagship Tenderloin Self-Help Center, thousands of community members obtained support from these crucial services this past fiscal year.
Location: 169 Sixth St.
Phone: (415) 546-5193 -

TENDERLOIN SELF-HELP CENTER
For nearly 40 years, The Tenderloin Self-Help Center has offered low-threshold services for those who may not otherwise use traditional services - including peer counseling, case management, individual and group harm reduction therapy, peer-led support groups, assistance with income support, referral to behavioral health services, longer-term housing, and socialization and self-care activities.
Location: 146 Leavenworth St.
Phone: (415) 749-2143
Fighting for the Soul of the City since 1967
Hospitality House is a progressive, community-based organization located in San Francisco’s Tenderloin Neighborhood, Sixth Street Corridor, and Mid-Market Area that provides opportunities and resources for personal growth and self-determination to unhoused people and neighborhood residents. Our mission is to build community strength by advocating policies and rendering services which foster self-sufficiency and cultural enrichment.
The organization is driven by our core values of:
Community Power, the belief that people experiencing the problem will come up with the best solutions; Resilience, anybody can change their lives; Dignity, that all people have equal value and are worthy of honor and respect; Mutual Respect, honoring the dignity of all people is both a right and responsibility; and Self-Determination, that people have the right to make choices about how to live their lives. Our organizational strategies include a commitment to leadership development and peer staffing, low-threshold access to programs, the harm reduction model, and systems change through community organizing and coalition building. We encourage participation from our constituents on all levels of the organization.

