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This year, Heading Home won a competitive bid to run the winter shelter, which in the past had been operated by Steelbridge, formerly the Albuquerque Rescue Mission, and The Rock at Noon Day.

While the overnight shelter does not serve hot meals, beverages and snacks will be provided.

The shelter, which is open every night from mid-November through mid-March, provided a warm bed last winter for an average of 235 people nightly, or more than 25,000 overnight stays in total, Berry said. The shelter has the ability to accommodate up to 300 people in separate areas for single men, single women, families and families with children.

Heading Home chief operating officer Joell Ackerman said the agency believes in a “housing first” approach, “so housing and emergency shelters are kind of key ingredients in stabilizing our homeless population, and this is particularly important in the colder months of the year.”

Among the volunteers who contributed to transforming the shelter were employees of Sandia National Laboratories, their families and friends, local Boy and Girl Scouts, and members of the New Mexico National Guard and Sagebrush Church.

Pickup for transportation to the overnight winter shelter will be at:

• The Rock at Noon Day, 2400 Second Street NW, Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday at 5, 6 and 7 p.m.

• Coronado Park, 301 McKnight Ave NW, every evening at 5, 6 and 7 p.m.

• Emergency van pickup, every evening from 6 through 11:30 p.m. at First Street and Lomas (southeast corner), Central and Unser Transit Center (east parking lot). Call 388-4734 for estimated arrival times.

Vans return people to the various pickup sites at 7 a.m. each morning.