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Former Colorado Springs school transformed into transitional apartments for homeless families

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Children’s laughter again will fill the hallways of an old elementary school in the Hillside neighborhood that closed nine years ago, but the kids won’t be in classes, they’ll be right at home with their parents.

Helen Hunt Elementary School at 601 S. Institute St. is now Hunt Family Housing, a 24-unit transitional apartment complex for parents and children exiting homelessness.

“We think this will have a significant impact on reducing family homelessness in our community,” Andy Barton, CEO of Catholic Charities of Central Colorado, said at a grand opening and ribbon-cutting event Wednesday.

The annual count of the homeless population in El Paso County that was released last month showed 62 children through age 17 living in emergency shelters on one night in January and two children unsheltered on the streets.

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The first tenants — two dads with their kids, one living in their car, the other outside — will move in on Monday, Barton said.

Resident families must qualify as “extremely low income” under federal government definitions and earn a household income of 30% or less of the area median income. That’s $30,400 or less annually for a family of three, for example. They’ll pay 30% of earnings in rent. If they have no income, they won’t pay anything.

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A crowd gathers outside the old Helen Hunt Elementary School as Alison George, housing director at Colorado Department of Local Affairs/Division of Housing, speaks Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025, during the grand opening of the Catholic Charities’ Hunt Family Housing. The old school was converted into a 24-unit housing project for homeless families.






Divided into four studio apartments, seven two-bedrooms, one one-bedroom and one three-bedroom units, the renovated building will help about 60 adults and children annually and 120 people every three years, officials estimate.

From the get-go, Barton said residents will have at least three experts from Catholic Charities by their side to help them return to a stable lifestyle: a caseworker, a behavioral health therapist and a specialist in early childhood and family education.

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Catholic Charities already offers those and other services such as free baby supplies at the Hunt campus for 150 to 200 homeless or vulnerable families a month. The operations, along with a coffee shop, will continue to be located there.

Inside and out, the $9 million “adaptive reuse” project retained some historical elements and character of the original 1902 school building, said Mark Tremmel, principal architect and founder of Tremmel Design Group Architecture in Colorado Springs.

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Guests explore an apartment at the Catholic Charities’ Hunt Family Housing Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025, during the grand opening. The old Helen Hunt Elementary School was converted into a 24-unit housing project for homeless families.






For example, one apartment’s dining area includes the arch that once topped a raised performance stage, with the words “Helen Hunt Children’s Theater.”

And the focal point in the apartment occupying the former principal’s office on the top floor is a lustrous Van Briggle Pottery fireplace.

The views of Pikes Peak also drew comments during Wednesday’s unveiling, which about 200 people attended.

“Talk about historic,” one attendee said while looking at an old photo of the gymnasium and the stage and comparing it to what she was seeing. “Oh, how fun,” said another.

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“Awesome,” “beautiful” and “amazing” also could be heard from those getting their first look at the work by Colarelli Construction.

Old wooden floors have stories to tell but no longer creak and have been polished to a nick-free shine.

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Guests walk the halls of the Catholic Charities’ Hunt Family Housing Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025, during the grand opening. The old Helen Hunt Elementary School in Colorado Springs was converted into a 24-unit housing project for homeless families.






No walls were removed but some were added, Tremmel said, to transform turn-of-the-last-century classrooms into individual contemporary residences with living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens, dinettes and individual bathrooms.

High windows and wainscoting also speak of the building’s former life, while muted gray, black, cream and beige color themes were chosen to lessen trauma, promote healing and dampen stress.

The chalk blackboards contained asbestos so were covered up, but new greenboards are outside each unit for messages.

Catholic Charities purchased the school property in 2018, moved services for homeless and low-income families there and in 2022 began seeing if the vision for transitional housing could become a reality.

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The building was determined to be stout, Tremmel said, with good bones, but the guts needed surgery. The sewer system was shot, a second boiler was providing parts for the first boiler to run, the plumbing was a bit of a mystery, and there was no fire protection system in place.

Prayer, patience and persistence carried the project to completion, he said.

Furniture donated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, landscaping and fruit trees contributed by First Congregational United Church of Christ, support from First Presbyterian Church and donations from various faiths helped support the project.

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Guests explore an apartment at the Catholic Charities’ Hunt Family Housing Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025, during the grand opening. The apartment features an old fireplace with original Van Briggle tiles from the old principal office. The old Helen Hunt Elementary School was converted into a 24-unit housing project for homeless families.






“The most sustainable building isn’t necessarily the most energy-efficient or the newest,” Tremmel said. “It’s one the community loves.”

The largest donor was the Colorado Division of Housing under the state Department of Local Affairs, which came through with a $3.8 million grant using federal stimulus funds to help convert the property.

“The project will provide opportunities for transformations and be a place for healing and growth,” said Alison George, state director of housing.

Charity is to benefit those in economic or spiritual poverty and is viewed as a fundamental expression of the Catholic faith, said Andrew Nussbaum, vice chair of the organization’s board of directors.

“This is a visible sign of what the Catholic Church is doing in the Colorado Springs community,” he said.

Contact the writer: 719-476-1656.


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