Los Angeles Times

Senior housing making ‘elderly islands’ obsolete

Multigener­ational communitie­s are being built for baby boomers

- By Andrew Khouri

Recently retired, Pam Watkins wanted a new lifestyle. The former school principal saw her Dana Point neighborho­od “turning over,” increasing­ly populated with young families busy with children or work. She wanted more people her own age to “play with,” but didn’t want to live in a “grave-yardish” retirement community.

So last year, Watkins and her husband moved into a $770,000 house just down the road in Rancho Mission Viejo, a new, large, master-planned community with neighborho­ods for seniors as well as those of all ages.

There are community spaces for everyone, but also a seniors-only clubhouse with lounge, fitness center and a resort-style saltwater pool and spa.

“We like seeing kids,” the 63-year-old said. “I don’t necessary want them in my pool jumping on me.”

Developers are increasing­ly building such multigener­ational communitie­s, lured by the massive baby boomer population aging into retirement. In doing so, they’re targeting people 55 and older, such as Watkins, who want to live near but not too close to families and kids.

Like senior developmen­ts around Palm Springs, the communitie­s are built for “active adults” who get around just fine and might even still be working.

In Southern California, builders were selling homes in 28 active-adult neighborho­ods at the end of the first quarter, compared with 15 two years earlier, according to research firm Metrostudy.

More than a third of those were in multigener­ational developmen­ts, compared with just 20% in 2015.

The investment­s mirror a larger senior housing boom, as companies provide the demographi­c with a range of housing tailored to their needs — from those who require no help to those who need a significan­t amount.

In 2015, developers across the country started 37,000 age-restricted homes, a category that includes many assisted-living facilities that provide help with healthcare, transporta­tion and meals, according to the latest analysis of census data from the

National Assn. of Home Builders.

That’s down from the previous two years but up sharply from 17,000 in 2009 when the Census Bureau first collected the data and the recession had decimated the housing industry.

Housing experts said they expect age-restricted housing to grow further, given the nation’s demographi­cs. By 2024, households age 55 and older will make up 44.5% of the U.S. population, compared with 42.8% this year, according to the National Assn. of Home Builders.

Developers are particular­ly bullish on multigener­ational communitie­s, which provide senior-only neighborho­ods in an otherwise family-oriented master plan.

A relatively new way to provide senior housing, they are often located in metropolit­an areas rather than far-flung resort towns, said Andrew Carle, founding director of the Program in Senior Housing Administra­tion at George Mason University.

Historical­ly, most 55and-older communitie­s have been “elderly islands,” on a “golf course or on top of the mountain somewhere,” Carle said. Even in large metropolit­an areas, senior apartment buildings or communitie­s such as Laguna Woods Village (formerly Leisure World) tend to be segregated from the surroundin­g area, he said.

“When you place older adults in younger settings, they age slower, but put them all together, they all age faster,” Carle said. “It’s not healthy to separate yourself.”

Aware of the latest housing trends, developers try to limit separation while providing some seclusion. In addition to community spaces for all ages, layout is taken into account.

At Rancho Mission Viejo, the 55-and-older neighborho­ods in the village of Esencia have a single point of entry, but no gates.

The mini-neighborho­ods consist of only around 50 to 150 homes and are connected by a system of trails to adjacent all-age neighborho­ods, which have proved popular with young families.

Watkins said that means when her grandchild­ren visit, they arrive “excited,” ready to play with children nearby. She can also have a cocktail at a seniors-only pool, or meet people her own age at Taco Tuesday or Wine-Down Wednesday.

“It’s the best of both worlds,” she said.

Developers — who typically get entitlemen­ts and then sell lots to individual home-builders — are eager to provide such experience­s, because they fulfill an unmet need and diversify the buying pool.

Instead of finding 1,000 potential homeowners who want to live in a community open to all ages, they can find 500 such buyers and 500 older individual­s looking to live with people their own age.

With many young couples struggling to afford a down payment, some developers see a benefit in creating homes restricted to those 55 and older, especially because that cohort is growing.

“The problem with the millennial­s is they don’t have [much] money,” said Steve Cameron, president of Foremost Companies, which is developing the multigener­ational Terramor community in Temescal Valley, just outside Corona in western Riverside County.

Sales at the $100-millionplu­s project kicked off in April. When completed, it is expected to have around 400 homes for all ages and 1,000 for households where at least one person is 55 years or older. At the moment, only the age-55-plus homes are for sale and start in the mid-$400,000s, around what typical new homes are fetching in the area.

Rancho Mission Viejo is even larger. About 6,000 of the eventual 14,000 homes will be reserved for people at least 55 years old. Prices for the senior homes start in the $600,000s. The all-age homes sell from the low $400,000s for a townhome to more than $1 million for a large singlefami­ly house.

The Irvine Co. is also developing its first senior neighborho­od as part of the larger all-age Cypress Village community. Sales of the 243 homes are expected to start by the end of the year.

Though the projects are geared toward “active adults,” the toll of aging must be taken into account.

At Terramor, street signs will have larger than normal lettering and the senior clubhouse will have no steps, but instead will have “graceful ramps” leading people from clubhouse to pool, Cameron said.

The idea? Make it easier for seniors to get around, without making the design tweaks noticeable.

The same idea applies to the age-55-plus homes, which are single story and often have wide doorways and few to no steps. There are also shower stalls, meaning residents don’t have to step over a tub to get into the shower.

Companies that build such houses say business is good. Irvine’s CalAtlanti­c, for example, said it’s building 55-and-older homes in 10 states this year, including at multigener­ational communitie­s in San Diego and Santa Clarita, as well as at Rancho Mission Viejo, Terramor and the new Irvine Co. project.

“We continue to expand that market segment,” said Elliot Mann, the company’s Southern California president. “That says a lot about how well they have been working for us.”

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? PAM WATKINS and husband Craig visit a seniors-only pool at Rancho Mission Viejo, a multigener­ational community in Orange County.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times PAM WATKINS and husband Craig visit a seniors-only pool at Rancho Mission Viejo, a multigener­ational community in Orange County.
 ?? Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? LAST YEAR Craig and Pam Watkins moved into a $770,000 house in Rancho Mission Viejo, a master-planned community with neighborho­ods for seniors as well as those of all ages. There are community spaces for everyone, but also a seniors-only clubhouse.
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times LAST YEAR Craig and Pam Watkins moved into a $770,000 house in Rancho Mission Viejo, a master-planned community with neighborho­ods for seniors as well as those of all ages. There are community spaces for everyone, but also a seniors-only clubhouse.
 ??  ?? ABOUT 6,000 of the eventual 14,000 homes in Rancho Mission Viejo will be reserved for people at least 55 years old. Prices for the homes start in the $600,000s.
ABOUT 6,000 of the eventual 14,000 homes in Rancho Mission Viejo will be reserved for people at least 55 years old. Prices for the homes start in the $600,000s.

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