Austin American-Statesman

Many retirees opting to live out golden years on campus

- By Martin Z. Braun Bloomberg News

A growing number of retirees are opting to spend their golden years living close to a university campus. Or, in the case of Purchase College in Purchase, N.Y., on it.

Later this month, a nonprofit organizati­on affiliated with Purchase plans to sell $14.5 million in unrated tax-exempt notes to begin developmen­t of a 385-unit retirement community on its 500-acre campus. Known as Broadview, the community is on a 40-acre parcel near the college’s performing arts center and Neuberger Museum of Art.

The project will include a “learning commons” with classrooms, studio and performanc­e spaces. Residents and students at the college — part of the State University of New York system based in Westcheste­r County, 25 miles north of New York City — can use the space for lectures, seminars and perfor- mances.

Residents will “be involved in the museum and the per- forming arts center; they’ll be mentors to our students,” said Purchase College Pres- ident Thomas Schwarz in a telephone interview. “We have people from the academic side designing courses that are intergener­ational. We really want it to be integrated.”

Broadview is the latest publicly financed develop- ment to capitalize on demand from retirees to live in com- munities near universiti­es where they can take classes, attend art exhibits and sports events and maintain a connection to their alma mater. Developers have built senior communitie­s near the University of Texas, the Univer- sity of Florida, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Oberlin College, Duke Univer- sity and Penn State, among others. Lasell College in Newton, Massachuse­tts, has an on-campus retirement community called Lasell Village.

Purchase Senior Community Inc. will use proceeds of the five-year notes to pay for designs, marketing and preliminar­y constructi­on costs. The community plans to issue more than $300 million in tax-exempt debt around 2020 to complete the developmen­t.

“We wouldn’t put it on fraternity row,” said Andrew Nesi, an executive vice president at HJ Sims & Co., which is managing the deal. “It’s in a beautiful part of the campus.”

The typical senior community requires about $20 million of seed capital to get to the financing stage, Nesi said. Investors will get a leasehold mortgage on the property allowing them to take over the project if the owners default.

Planning for the senior community has been in the works since 2004. New York state passed legislatio­n in 2011 authorizin­g a 75-year ground lease to the developmen­t. Purchase will receive $2 million annually in rent, increasing 10 percent every fifth year through the 71st year of the lease, and $8 million annually for the final five years.

The college is also entitled to additional rent depending on performanc­e of the project. State law requires 75 percent of rent to go to student financial aid and 25 percent to support the faculty.

“It can be lucrative for the college because of those lease terms,” Nesi said.

Purchase, a liberal arts college with 4,200 students, doesn’t have graduate programs in science and technology that can attract grant money. What the college does have is a history of seniors who audit classes, Schwarz said. It also has a profession­al and conservato­ry arts programs in visual arts, music, dance and media.

The first phase of the developmen­t includes 220 independen­t living units, 18 assisted living suites and 12 bedrooms for patients with Alzheimer’s or dementia. The college estimates it will open in 2021.

Entrance fees for apartments range from $595,000 for a one-bedroom, 1.5 bathroom, to $1.5 million for a two-bedroom, 2.5 bathroom with a study. Monthly maintenanc­e fees on the units run from $4,200 to $8,500.

Broadview will also have market rate “villas” and single family homes with entrance fees from $1.5 million to $1.9 million, and monthly fees between $8,500 to $9,900. Residents who leave, or their survivors, receive 90 percent of the entrance fee back when a new tenant moves into their unit.

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