Harlem Children’s Zone was founded in 1970 as Rheedlen, New York’s first truancy prevention program. Over the next quarter century, however, Harlem continued on a steep decline, ravaged by the crack epidemic and gang violence. In the early 1990s, a pilot project was launched with the idea that by bringing a range of support services to a single block, an organization could comprehensively address the problems faced by poor families. By 1997, the scope had expanded to a 24-block area and the Harlem Children’s Zone was born. The project is defined by a unique approach to rebuilding social fabric and breaking the cycle of inter-generational poverty, underpinned by a focus on guiding children through a pipeline, from school to university and on to the job market. Now encompassing a 100-block area, serving more than 8,000 children and 6,000 adults, the Harlem Children’s Zone brings together a number of targeted initiatives. While the most prominent is the network of Promise Academy charter schools, the organization also delivers after-school through social service and health/community-building programs free of charge. Although the long-term impact of this ambitious cradle to college model cannot yet be known, early evaluations have shown substantive improvements already across a range of educational and health indicators. Website: http://www.hcz.org/