The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center

The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center, Nonprofit Organization, 462 Main Street, Crestview, FL.

Where care, compassion, and community grow together.

501(c)(3) nonprofit building a collaborative autism support hub focused on therapies, resources, community, and individualized educational support options for families.

06/15/2026

📢 Volunteers Needed! 📢

We're still looking for volunteers to help with our upcoming Building The Hub Community Yard Sale on June 27th!

Whether you can help for an hour or the whole day, we'd love to have you join us as we raise funds for The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center.

Sign up here:
https://www.zeffy.com/en-US/ticketing/building-the-hub-community-yard-sale

Thank you for helping us build something amazing for our community!

06/15/2026

A heartfelt thank you to Cabinets of Distinction ,LLC for their generous donation of shopping bags and a clothing rack for our upcoming Building The Hub Community Yard Sale!

Your support helps make this event possible and brings us one step closer to creating meaningful opportunities for individuals and families affected by autism in our community. We are incredibly grateful for your kindness and commitment to giving back.

Thank you for helping us Build The Hub!

06/08/2026

The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center is looking for community support!

We're currently seeking:

• Local businesses willing to display flyers for our upcoming Building The Hub events
• A business or individual to sponsor shopping bags for our Community Yard Sale on June 27 (need filled)
• Hanger donations
• Clothing rack donations
• Plastic storage bins

If you'd like to help support our mission, please contact us at (850) 634-6020 via call or text, or email [email protected].

The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to creating more connected, supportive services for children with autism and their families throughout our community.

Thank you for helping us build something special!

Photos from The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center's post 06/06/2026

🚨 WE NEED YOUR HELP 🚨

The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center is looking for a 7x16 enclosed trailer.

We are also looking for someone willing to loan us a 7x16 enclosed trailer from next week through the end of June to help store yard sale donations for our upcoming fundraiser

OR

A trailer donation for long-term nonprofit use.

If you can help, or know someone who can, please send us a message!

Please share to help us spread the word.

06/06/2026

🚨 DONATION NEEDED 🚨

Friends, we need your help.

We are gearing up for our next community yard sale on June 27, and we need donations FAST to make this fundraiser a success.

If you’ve been meaning to clean out closets, garages, playrooms, storage buildings, or spare rooms, now is the perfect time.

We’re looking for gently used:

Clothing
Toys & Games
Furniture
Home Decor
Household Items
Appliances
Baby & Kid Items
And More

Every single item donated helps raise funds for The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center, a local 501(c)(3) nonprofit working to create more connected, supportive services for children with autism and their families right here in our community.

This mission is so much bigger than a building. It’s about creating a place where families feel supported, children can thrive, and resources are accessible under one roof.

🗓️ Yard Sale Date: June 27, 2026

📍 Donation Drop-Off Location:
850 Therapy, LLC
124 John King Road
Crestview, FL

🕗 Monday–Thursday
8:00 AM – 5:30 PM

📱 Large furniture or item donation?
Text (850) 634-6020 to schedule a drop-off appointment.

Please SHARE this post, TAG friends, and HELP us spread the word. We have just a few weeks to collect donations, and every item truly makes a difference.

Thank you for helping us build something special for families in our community.

05/30/2026

Autism isn’t just a diagnosis.

It’s a journey that impacts the entire family.

From navigating therapies and school supports to managing schedules, advocating for services, and planning for the future, families of children on the autism spectrum often carry challenges that many people never see.

We want to hear from those living it every day.

Fill in the blank:

“Life would be easier for our family if __________.”

Parents and caregivers, we want to hear from you.

Your experiences matter, and your voices help shape conversations about what families truly need in our community.

👇🏽Complete the sentence in the comments

05/21/2026

The Hub really came from sitting with families and seeing just how hard it is to navigate everything on their own. As a clinic owner, I’ve had a front row seat to the constant balancing act so many parents are living every day between therapies, evaluations, school meetings, tutoring, appointments, advocacy, and just trying to make life feel manageable for their child and family.

The more conversations I had with parents, the more I realized our community doesn’t just need more services. Families need support that actually feels connected. They need people who understand. They need a place that feels collaborative instead of overwhelming.

That’s the heart behind The Hub.

Not because we wanted to create “another center,” but because we truly believe families deserve better than running themselves exhausted trying to piece support together on their own.

Our vision is to create an alternative educational and support option for families who are looking for something more individualized, relationship-based, and supportive for their child. A place where therapies, educational support, life skills, social opportunities, and high quality individualized care can exist together under one roof.

There is still so much ahead, but seeing this vision start to come to life has been incredibly meaningful.

05/20/2026

SAVE THE DATE

đź—“ June 27, 2026

The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center’s community yard sale is officially happening, and we’re now accepting donations!

It’s the perfect time to clean out closets, playrooms, garages, and storage spaces. We are accepting gently used, good condition:

➕Clothing
➕Home goods
➕Furniture
➕Appliances
➕Toys & games
➕Decor
➕Household items
➕And more

Large item drop offs require an appointment.

📱 Text (850) 634-6020 to schedule.

Smaller items and clothing may be dropped off at:

📍124 John King Road
Crestview, FL

Monday–Thursday
8:00 AM – 5:30 PM

Every donation and every purchase helps support The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center, a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit working to build more connected, supportive services for children and families across our community.

Thank you for continuing to show up for this mission.

05/15/2026

This morning, I sat across from a mom over breakfast at Tropical Palm Restaurant and asked her a simple question.

“What does a normal week look like for your family?”

She laughed softly before saying,
“There’s really no such thing as normal.”

This family is stationed here at Eglin Air Force Base.

Three beautiful children.
Ages 4, 6, and 7.
All three on the autism spectrum.

Two boys.
One girl.

Dad works full time and typically leaves for work before the children wake up.

Mom stays home because their schedule leaves no other option.

Their 4-year-old is diagnosed Level 2 ASD.
Their 6-year-old is diagnosed Level 3 ASD.
Their 7-year-old is diagnosed Level 2 ASD.

And this is just a glimpse into their Monday.

The youngest often does not sleep well.
Sometimes he’s awake until 2:00 AM.

At 6:00 AM, the alarm goes off.

Or maybe mom is already awake because one of the children never fully settled during the night.

By 6:30 AM breakfast starts.

Their daughter eats in her room because the noise and chaos in the kitchen is overwhelming for her. Sometimes she eats. Sometimes food ends up all over the room instead.

Mom is simultaneously packing lunches, filling water bottles, charging AAC devices, gathering pull-ups and extra clothes, laying out outfits, and preparing for the day before it has even truly started.

By 7:10 AM, the process begins.

Brushing teeth.
Fixing hair.
Toileting.
Finding shoes.
Getting everyone dressed one by one.

While she’s helping one child, another may be spraying water all over the kitchen floor, climbing furniture, self harming, dumping items, or trying to run out the door.

At 7:40 AM she starts loading bags into the car.

Then the children.
One at a time.

Always watching.
Always counting heads.
Always hoping no one elopes while another is being buckled in.

The goal is to leave the driveway by 8:10 AM.

School drop off for the older two at 8:20.

Then back home.
Get herself and the youngest ready.
Outpatient therapies from 9:30-11:00.

Back home for lunch.
Pack again for ABA.

12:50 PM.
Back in the car.

Check the older kids out of school.
Drive to ABA.
Drop them off.
Return home with the youngest.

4:05 PM.
Back in the car again.

Pick up from ABA.
Home for dinner.

And during all of this?

Children climbing bookshelves.
Sitting on top of vehicles.
Water running endlessly from sinks.
GO-GO Squeezes emptied onto floors and walls.
Songs echoing through the house.
Self harming.
Constant movement.
Constant noise.
Constant vigilance.

A child climbing out of a safety carseat while the vehicle is moving.

Tiny hands suddenly covering mom’s eyes from the backseat while she’s driving down the road trying to safely get everyone where they need to be.

Dad gets home between 5:30 PM and 6:00 PM.

Then together, they begin bedtime.

One child at a time.

Tuesday looks different, but somehow exactly the same.

ABA drop offs.
School drop offs.
Outpatient therapies.
IEP meetings.
Parent trainings.
Grocery pickups squeezed into tiny windows of time.
Phone calls.
Appointments.
More driving.
More coordinating.
More surviving.

And this is every single week.

Monday through Friday.

No breaks.
No slowing down.
No pause button.

This family is not alone.

There are families all across our community keeping the roads hot every single day trying to piece together the support their children need.

Therapy in one place.
School in another.
ABA somewhere else.
Parent trainings.
Meetings.
Evaluations.
Specialists.
Schedules built entirely around survival.

And then there’s the fear.

Earlier this week, mom finally sat down on the couch after dad got home.

Just for a moment.

Or so she thought.

One child had quietly opened a bedroom window.

The next thing she saw were cars stopped in front of her house.

She immediately knew.

Her son was lying in the road in front of their driveway.

This was not the first time he had escaped.

They have the alarms.
The safety locks.
The monitoring.
The routines.
The precautions.

They have done everything they know to do.

Safety beds?
Denied by insurance.

Support?
Limited.

Rest?
Almost nonexistent.

And even carefully built schedules are constantly interrupted by calls from school.

“Your child hit staff.”
“They bit someone.”
“They’re dysregulated.”
“They ate sand.”
“There’s no substitute today.” “We need you to come get them.”

These families are exhausted.

Not because they do not love their children.

But because they are carrying the weight of systems that were never designed to fully support children who do not fit inside rigid boxes.

And the truth is, caregivers, educators, therapists, paraprofessionals, and support staff are exhausted too. Many are doing everything they can with limited resources, limited support, and systems that leave everyone stretched thin while trying to serve children they care about deeply.

This is why The Hub Comprehensive Autism Center was created.

Not simply to offer therapies.

But to reimagine what support could look like for families like this.

A place where individualized educational support, therapeutic services, regulation support, and family-centered care can exist together in one consistent environment.

A place designed to meet children where they are.

Where flexibility exists on the hard days.
Where support exists before crisis.
Where families are not spending their entire lives driving from one appointment to the next just trying to hold everything together.

A place where children can learn, grow, receive support services, build life skills, and access therapies in a way that honors their individual needs.

A place where caregivers, educators, therapists, and support staff also have the resources, collaboration, support, and environment needed to continue serving the children they love so deeply.

A place where parents can finally breathe.

Where they can go home after pickup and simply be a family.

Where trusted respite opportunities, social programs, recreational activities, and community supports eventually become part of the bigger picture too.

This vision was never built from theory.

It was built from listening to families.

From watching exhaustion behind brave smiles.
From hearing stories told quietly through tears.
From seeing parents survive impossible schedules because they love their children that deeply.

Families deserve more than survival mode.

And we believe with everything in us that a better way is possible.

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Address


462 Main Street
Crestview, FL
32536