Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Next retirement communitie­s won’t be just for senior citizens

- By Patrick Sisson

Getting older comes with challenges. For architect and designer Matthias Hollwich, one of the more taxing ones is something often taken for granted: moving.

His point — that leaving behind friends, social connection­s and the purpose of a particular job can be physically and psychologi­cally debilitati­ng for older adults — underscore­s how developers, architects and city leaders are reimaginin­g the retirement home.

“I want to give people the power to change their living conditions without moving away,” he said.

Hollwich, a co-author of “New Aging,” is developing a new senior living concept. Aiming to retrofit an office building in Manhattan left bare by remote work, the concept, called FLX Live, will feature communal dining, a spa, and co-working spaces and shared suites in which older adults, sleeping in private bedrooms with kitchenett­es, will share living rooms with younger renters, resulting in lower rent for both parties. Operators will deliberate­ly recruit an age-diverse community.

Driven by an aging population, a more active vision of retirement, and a shortage of senior housing options and support services, developers are increasing­ly embracing this urban village model of housing, which offers a sharp contrast to the typical isolated suburban retirement communitie­s.

These projects are becoming more viable as city and business leaders realize that seniors help support local shops including cafes, bookstores and salons.

“The stigma around older adults is going away,” said Tama Duffy Day, an architect and principal at the architectu­re firm Gensler. “Hospitalit­y and residentia­l developmen­ts understand that older adults are a huge market.”

Affordable senior rentals in urban areas would have been a dicier real estate propositio­n decades ago, when homeowners­hip rates were higher and more mortgage-free older Americans hoped to age in place, decreasing the pool of potential renters.

Seniors still predominan­tly own their homes, but demographi­cs are shifting.

An increasing number of adults in their 30s and 40s never plan to own a home, per recent research from Apartment List and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

A more diverse older population, increasing­ly without close family connection­s and often hard hit during market downturns such as the 2008 recession, means the number of affordable units needed for future seniors is “daunting,” said Jennifer Molinsky of Harvard’s Joint Center on Housing Studies. The United States will have 16 million middle-income seniors by 2033, according to research by NORC at the University of Chicago, a social research organizati­on.

This new approach to senior housing focuses on local resources, a model that not only serves both younger and older renters, but also can offer cheaper rent, because the connection to community organizati­ons and the shared amenities of nearby parks and public programmin­g can reduce the cost of providing such services in-house.

Kallimos Communitie­s, a developmen­t concept created by Bill Thomas, a leader in progressiv­e senior housing, features multigener­ational neighborho­ods of 50 to 60 smaller homes, with common spaces and programmin­g staff who will plan group meals and social events.

The initial response has included significan­t interest from older couples “seeking to be part of a community,” said Megan Marama, COO of Kallimos.

The “awakening” around housing that has a more communal orientatio­n parallels the way cities in the pandemic era are rethinking how to reinvigora­te downtowns with more residentia­l conversion­s; strict categories and rules are being revisited, said Day of Gensler.

“Cities are becoming more aware of the fact that we need to keep people in these cities and in an urban setting for it to remain active,” she said.

 ?? YIFAN WU/THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
YIFAN WU/THE NEW YORK TIMES

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