| No time to slow down
Communities adapt to a more active generation of retirees
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by Lisa Antonelli Bacon
for Virginia Business
August 2006
When her husband passed away
in June last year, Mary Easterly was in a bind. Her
husband, Harry, had made
her promise to keep their sprawling home on the James
River in Richmond. But it was large and lonely, and a
lot to manage for a single person who has seen age 80
come and go. “He thought I loved it as much as
he did, but I didn’t,” she says. “I
had my fingers crossed when I promised.”
By November, Easterly was happily settled
in a cottage at Richmond’s Westminster-Canterbury retirement
community. The cottage is smaller than the riverfront
home Harry loved, but it’s big enough for the Easterly
grandchildren and great-grandchildren to stay for as
long as she’ll have them. Problem is, like many
of her neighbors at Westminster-Canterbury, she doesn’t
stay still very long.
In February, Easterly and her two daughters
took an 18-day sojourn to Africa. But for the petite
octogenarian
brimming
with energy, the trip didn’t end there. Once at
home, she orchestrated a full-blown fete for 100 friends,
featuring a seated dinner with a guest speaker and a
PowerPoint show of her trip. Her guests described the
event as the best party of the season. Leaving the heavy
lifting, so to speak, to Westminster-Canterbury’s
staff, no one enjoyed the affair more than Easterly. “Moving
here was the best thing I ever did.”
Easterly embodies the new reality facing
21st-century retirement communities: If 50 is the new
30, then 80
is the new 50. Don’t believe it? Retirement communities
of old, replete with photogenic landscaping, clubhouses
and the odd swimming pool, are just that. Old. Today’s
retirement communities are more resort than restful,
more luxe than laid back, with youthful-thinking residents
planning forums, sharpening their pool games and calming
their inner selves through yoga or music therapy.
If
none of those sound appealing, fear not. Retirement
communities today have lists of activities that rival
any cruise
ship’s.
As the oldest baby boomers hit 60 this
year, the term “retirement” is
being redefined. Some of these aging boomers hope to
continue working until they go feet up. Others seek
second careers for fun and adventure. And still others
are cashing
out and devoting 100 percent of their time to leisure,
which can include any variety of endeavors from taking
up water polo to becoming a bridge master.
Age 65, once regarded as “retirement age,” holds
little meaning any more, except when calculating your
Social Security income. By definition, a retirement community
has a minimum age requirement. But these days, you can
be as young as 55 to gain entry. At Westminster-Canterbury
in Richmond, for instance, the minimum age is 62. But
where couples are concerned, only one of the pair has
to meet the requirement. “Historically, older people
moved to retirement communities,” says Marjorie
Bertolino of The Bertolino Group in Richmond, which specializes
in marketing to seniors. “Now younger, healthier
people are moving in while they’re still maintaining
active lifestyles.”
An obsession with health, fitness and
staying young is a hallmark of boomer culture. They proved
it in
the 1980s,
prompting the growth of private health clubs and
the proliferation of exercise shows on television. Whereas Jack LaLanne taught
their parents to stretch and kick, Richard Simmons turned boomers on to living-room
fitness. Before you could say “feel the burn,” every celebrity whose
career was on a downward arc pumped out an exercise video. The exercise video
craze has cooled, but boomers are no less obsessed. They’ve just found
more options to help them stay young.
Social historian Theodore Roszak calls
it “the longevity revolution,” which
is also the title of his book about boomers and aging. Life expectancy charts
show that Americans are living longer and healthier. A 2004 report from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that someone born in 1900
was lucky
to make it to age 47. Nowadays, we can expect to reach 77. The federal agency
attributes the dramatic rise in life expectancy to improved medical care
and preventive measures such as exercise and diet.
Consequently,
Roszak says, half
of all the people who ever lived to age 65 are alive today. And real estate
developers are taking them head on with what now is a niche: age-targeted
development.
Faced with a huge influx of like-minded
mid-lifers with plenty of time and cash on their hands,
forward-thinking
developers have been promoting healthy
lifestyles
in community settings without the fuss of home maintenance. This trend
isn’t
a huge leap for over-the-hill hippies who reinvented communal living in
the 1960s. To accommodate them in their mature years,
a host of retirement communities
are
springing up with promises to make the second half of life better than
the first. Fitness centers and Internet capabilities
are prerequisites. Beautiful
surroundings
are assumed. And amenities you never even thought of are being lumped on
like extra dollops of whipped cream.
Get this: The Marque at Heritage Hunt in Gainesville touts a pampered lifestyle,
including a list of services from ear candling to animal acupuncture. Residents
of The Fairmont in Manassas can snap up a chef-prepared breakfast before
walking a short distance to Tai Chi or calligraphy lessons.
Want someone
to design
a health program tailored to your own strengths, weaknesses and overall
health? Personal wellness counseling at The Park-Oak Grove Retirement
Community in
Roanoke
makes it all about you.
Research shows that boomers place premium
value on independence. “We want
autonomy,” says Bertolino, who is on the front end of the baby boom. “We
like choices, and we want to direct our own courses.” Services and amenities
these days are designed to ease residents into a healthy, leisurely life, with
as much independence as possible. “Folks are concerned about who is going
to meet their needs later on,” says Don Lecky, president and CEO of Westminster-Canterbury
in Richmond. “Many have children all over the world. Having mom and dad
move in with you doesn’t happen like it used to.”
Taking that into consideration, niche-directed
developers are offering ways to make later life fun and
easy. Burke-based Slenker Land Corp.,
for instance,
includes “Carefree
Living” home maintenance programs in all of its active-adult
communities. Its new development in Loudoun County, Central Parke
at Lowes Island,
touts its Resort Club for swimming, exercising and social activities.
All 181
units sold
out last December. And Celebrate by Del Webb, a new active-adult
community near Fredericksburg, is loaded with opportunities to
keep fit and healthy
amid luxurious,
fret-free living, including an indoor pool and track, putting green
and walking trails.
In addition to wooing potential residents
with resort-worthy amenities, new style communities provide
access to better than basic options
in retail, entertainment and services. If it can’t be found on the grounds, it can be found nearby. “These
communities are based on the New Town design,” says Bertolino, adding that
communities are strategically located in areas where shopping, health care and
entertainment already exist. “You have your own little
town with everything you need.”
Retirement communities are still evolving.
And as the competition grows, many are seeking to broaden
their appeal to capture a
wider swath of
the market. “Many
CCRCs [continuing-care retirement communities] are reinventing themselves and
adding more active-adult neighborhoods,” notes Bertolino. Westminster-Canterbury
in Richmond, for instance, is wrapping up a 700,000-square-foot expansion that
includes more independent living options, such as cottages and condos. And Sunnyside
in Harrisonburg, one of the region’s oldest CCRCs, now has villas, cottages
and apartments for those with a yen for independence. “The expansion residences
are allowing us to attract a segment of the market that we weren’t able
to accommodate in such large numbers before,” says Bill King, vice president
of marketing for Richmond’s Westminster-Canterbury. The
extension added 210 new independent living units, making a
total of 863 residences
on campus.
Another step in the evolution is the
emergence of destination communities. Instead of spending
weeks at a time at the “rivah” house, folks are enjoying
what seems like a permanent vacation. “We attract people who are looking
to pursue more of the things they’ve enjoyed over time,” says
Faye Krejci, vice president of marketing and community relations
for Rappahannock Westminster-Canterbury in Irvington in the
Northern Neck.
The retirement
community
is just a mile or so from the river, even closer to The
Tides Inn and just across the street from the Golden
Eagle Golf
Course.
While other retirement communities
draw overwhelmingly from their local markets, destination
communities draw
the majority
of their
residents
from farther
locales. “In
a destination location, you have a broader appeal because of where they are,” says
Krejci. “One of the things that makes a destination
location popular is that kids and grandchildren enjoy
visiting.”
Whatever the size or the sprawl, the
keyword in retirement living is “community.” “As
we grow older, we can become isolated. We might outlive friends, family,” says
Lecky. “Having that sense of community is extremely
important.”
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