The Renaissance Home for Youth is a criminal rehabilitation center and shelter car facility located near Alexandria, Louisiana, USA at 6177 Bayou Rapides Road in western Rapides Parish co-founded in 1972 by Guy E. Humphries, Jr. (1922–2010), a Ninth Judicial District Court judge, Dr. Glenn Earl Bryant (1922–2003), then the pastor of the large downtown Emmanuel Baptist Church, and George M. Foote (1919–2010), the Alexandria municipal judge at the time. The center is a non-profit corporation financed from mostly originally donated assets. The facility was established to meet the "need apparent for an alternative to adult jail or reform school warehousing for kids (boys and girls) who deserved a second chance".
Robert J. "Bob" Tillie (born ca. 1944) of Pineville, the Renaissance founding executive director from 1973–2006, told the Alexandria Daily Town Talk on the occasion of Judge Humphries' death that the jurist in particular had been highly "supportive of a place for juveniles to have a second chance. He was very caring of kids in need."
Land for the home came from an abandoned vegetable farm owned by Central Louisiana State Hospital of Pineville. Civic clubs organized to renovate a former "potato shed" to house the first twelve boys in the program. The facility opened in March 1973. A grant was approved by the Red River Delta planning district and the Louisiana Commission on Law Enforcement. In 1974 Renaissance was licensed by the State of Louisiana, and a two-mil ad valorem tax was approved by voters to support the home, a showcase experiment under a law known as the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974.
In 1976 a renovated secure detention center was authorized under a capital improvement plan. The first female facility was added in 1977. A new center and administrative complex opened in 1985. In 1986 a shelter-care facility called the Hathorn Center opened, named for Edgar C. Hathorn (1921–1987), the owner of Hathorn Transfer and Storage of Alexandria and a former member of the Rapides Parish Police Jury. A one-room school opened in 2000, followed by a covered basketball court in 2004, and the Renaissance Education Center in 2008.