Angelique Ford showed up looking for help on the edge of downtown Minneapolis, with only a suitcase and $60.
Inside YouthLink, she found a one-stop shop for homeless teens like her, providing essentials from free meals, lockers and showers to housing assistance.
"I've never heard of a program like this in my life," said Ford, who is now 23 and works as an outreach worker at the nonprofit, helping teens in situations like she was in a few years ago. "It's empowering; who thought you could come to this place and get all of these resources?"
The center, the largest and longest-running drop-in center for homeless youth in Minnesota, is expanding its services to help more teens and young adults after completing a $6 million fundraising campaign and a major renovation.
On Wednesday, elected officials, staff and supporters celebrated the makeover and the end of a three-year fundraising campaign, which wrapped up last fall with a $1.4 million donation from the Golden Valley-based Peter J. King Family Foundation. The nonprofit honored that "milestone gift" by rededicating the building, located off Linden Avenue W. near Interstate 394, with the foundation's name.
The former jewelry factory, once known for its dark, windowless rooms with raggedy couches, has been transformed with windows, skylights, an open design, colorful walls and new carpet. The renovation, which finished a year ago, means more space to cook free meals, more rooms for mental health counseling and a new career center.
"It's a really historic day," said Heather Huseby, the executive director.
Homelessness has reached a record high in Minnesota, according to a report this year by Wilder Research. Youth under the age of 24 make up nearly half of the state's 10,200 homeless people, and the number of homeless youth on their own increased 1% in 2018.