Virginia Beach-based nonprofit to expand, offer new autism services

When Aimee Darby lost her daughter, Eliza, who was diagnosed with autism and suffered from seizures, she started the Eliza Hope Foundation with a mission to provide all essential services for children with autism in one space.

In 2018, she opened her nonprofit at 629 Phoenix Drive in the Lynnhaven area with a 5,500-square-foot therapy center. Her goal was to offer an early intervention social program, speech therapy, occupational therapy, physical therapy and applied behavior analysis in one convenient and welcoming location.

In 2022, many of the providers were asking for more space and additional therapy rooms. So, Darby converted the conference room into three new therapy rooms. She said they slowly started to outgrow the space and were contemplating the idea of buying a building. However, they didn’t want to create debt for the foundation.

Fortunately, the adjacent commercial space became available, and they were able to rent the additional area. Starting in September, the Eliza Hope Foundation will be knocking down a wall and doubling the center to 11,000 square feet. With the help of donors, friends and in-kind partners, this will be the first formal expansion since the doors opened, said Darby, the CEO.

“We are so excited to have more space for all of the children we currently serve,” Darby said. “We’ll have new services to truly meet the needs of every child on the autism spectrum.”

The expanded therapy center will provide all of the current services in addition to neurofeedback, Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule testing and assistance with medical waivers. The center will have more applied behavior analysis providers accepting all forms of insurance.

Eliza Hope Foundation is expanding its facility in the Lynnhaven area of Virginia Beach. The expansion includes an updated eating space called the Kids Cafe, a calm room filled with sensory items like bean bags, sensory boards and bubble tubes, and a larger sensory gym featuring a new slide, sensory swings, climbing ladders and a zip line. (Courtesy of Eliza Hope Foundation)

Additionally, there will be an updated eating space called the Kids Cafe, a calm room filled with sensory items like bean bags, sensory boards and bubble tubes, and a larger sensory gym featuring a new slide, sensory swings, climbing ladders and a zip line. A new art and activity studio will feature art supplies, easels, drying racks, multiple sinks and an array of art mediums for kids to discover during their extracurricular activities.

The Eliza Hope Foundation is looking to add a family therapist, chiropractor and acupuncturist to its services. Sponsorship opportunities and naming rights are still available for the expansion, which is scheduled to be completed by October.

“This center belongs to all the families that have battled to find a place for their children to learn,” Darby said. “This place belongs to all the the little boys and girls that struggle to communicate but have so much to teach us. This center belongs to all of us.”

For more information, visit elizahope.org.

Lee Belote, jlbelote@verizon.net

Starting in Sept., the Eliza Hope Foundation will be knocking down a wall and doubling the center to 11,000 square feet. With the help of donors, friends and in-kind partners, this will be the first formal expansion since the doors opened, founder and CEO Aimee Darby said. (Courtesy of Eliza Hope Foundation)

 

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