Arapahoe House Littleton Center
Closed: Please See Nearby Facilities
Littleton, Colorado
About Arapahoe House Littleton Center
Arapahoe House Littleton Center permanently closed in 2017. This was an addiction treatment center in Littleton, Colorado that offered residential care for women, especially mothers or expectant mothers with young children.
Through its New Directions for Families program, clients received intensive, family-centered treatment alongside mental health and trauma support with housing and meals provided.
Residential Treatment in Littleton
The Littleton Center focused on residential treatment including short-term intensive residential remediation treatment (STIRRT), transitional residential treatment, and the New Directions for Families residential program. Medication-assisted treatment (MAT) components may have included buprenorphine, naltrexone (including injectable options like Vivitrol), acamprosate, and disulfiram when appropriate. While Arapahoe House also offered outpatient services at other locations, Littleton was primarily residential.
Clients Served and Supported
This program primarily served young adult and adult women with a strong focus on women who were pregnant, postpartum, or parenting and had dependent children. It also supported women who were working to regain or maintain custody. The center was equipped to help individuals with co-occurring mental health conditions and trauma histories including domestic or sexual abuse.
Day-to-Day Therapy and Counseling
Care blended individual, group, and family therapy with relapse prevention and substance use counseling. Families also received case management, health education, parenting skill development, and family bonding activities. A key feature was on-site early childhood education for children ages six weeks to five years.
Financial Details to Know
The program accepted Medicaid and private insurance, and it also offered sliding fee scales and financial assistance including scholarship options. Other funding sources may have included self-pay and state-financed insurance plans beyond Medicaid.



