The dining room at the front of the six-story former paint factory in the trendy Brooklyn waterfront neighborhood of DUMBO is well-lit; light pours in through high windows that line the top of the room. The tables are round, and on them sits a hipster’s feast: an egg sandwich made with smoked salmon and marinated cucumbers, ancient grain porridge decorated with stewed blueberries, banana bread topped with peach compote, and of course, avocado toast.

If this were a celebrity-filled rehab center, you wouldn’t bat an eye. But this facility is specifically intended to serve working, middle-class New Yorkers, who can’t pay out of pocket for luxury treatment but who have insurance through their employers.

When we were figuring out what type of program we wanted to develop in here, we actually talked to a lot of payers in the city–employee assistance programs, unions–and heard from them that there just weren’t enough good drug rehabilitation programs that took employer-based insurance

Read the full article on luxury addiction rehab at Fast Company