Promise Resource Network Cuts Ribbon on Recovery Hub & Café in Raleigh
Promise Resource Network opened the Recovery Hub & Café at 310 N. Harrington St., downtown Raleigh, on Feb. 24, 2026, marking the launch with a ribbon-cutting that included state and local partners.

Promise Resource Network (PRN), a peer-run nonprofit, opened a new Recovery Hub & Café at 310 N. Harrington St. in downtown Raleigh on Feb. 24, 2026, holding a ribbon-cutting that included state and local partners. The event marked PRN’s visible expansion into downtown Raleigh and placed the hub within walking distance of county services and transit corridors.
Sources differ on the site’s styling. The Original Report names the site “Recovery Hub & Café.” Coverage elsewhere described the same location as a “recovery hub and cafe” and referred to a peer-run “recovery café,” indicating stylistic variation across reports but agreement that the site is peer-run and located at 310 N. Harrington St.
Descriptions of the hub’s purpose appear in truncated form in available coverage. Spectrumlocalnews reported the Promise Resource Network “opens a recovery hub and cafe in downtown Raleigh to help community members recover from” and stopped mid-sentence. Ncnewsline wrote that PRN “on Tuesday opened a peer-run ‘recovery café’ in downtown Raleigh to support people with mental illness and” and likewise did not complete the thought. Those excerpts indicate an orientation toward recovery and mental-health support but do not provide the full scope of services or populations served.
The Original Report noted the ribbon-cutting “included state and local partners” and begins a fragment naming a state agency: “The North Carolina Department of Health and” with the sentence cut off. No full list of attending agencies or partner organizations is included in the reporting available, and no quoted statements from PRN leadership, state officials, or attendees were provided in the source fragments.
Operational details were not published in the available notes. The reporting offers no hours of operation, service menu, staffing model, funding amounts, eligibility criteria, or contact information for PRN at the new 310 N. Harrington St. address. Those omissions matter for Wake County residents trying to assess where the hub will fit within behavioral-health access in Raleigh and how peer-run supports will coordinate with existing county and state services.
The opening of a peer-run recovery site in downtown Raleigh on Feb. 24, 2026, is a concrete development in local behavioral-health capacity, but the available coverage leaves key questions unanswered about partners, services, and how the hub will link to Wake County systems. Confirming the incomplete agency fragment “The North Carolina Department of Health and” and obtaining a full list of state and local partners, a service description, and operational details will be necessary to evaluate the hub’s impact on public health, community access, and equity in Wake County.
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