Orlando Sentinel

Seniors opting to grow old in high style

Upscale retirement homes cater to affluent boomers

- By Steven Kurutz

NEW YORK — Bill Morin, 82, a retired CEO, was not happy with his run-of-the-mill nursing home on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. The elevators were always broken, his small room faced a brick building and he needed permission every time he wanted to venture out.

So last year, during the height of the pandemic, he traded up to the Watermark at Brooklyn Heights, a new luxury “senior living community” housed in a former 16-story hotel from the 1920s, with colonnaded towers that evoke an Italian palazzo, an indoor swimming pool and a small army of caregivers to anticipate his needs.

Morin’s son, Tim, who lives nearby and suggested the Watermark to his father, is amazed by the opulence.

“This is never what I would have envisioned assisted living for my aging parent to look like,” said Tim Morin, president of an executive coaching firm. “It’s the nicest building he’s ever lived in. And he lived in a nice co-op in Murray Hill for 30-something years.”

His father would concur. Relaxing with a Lee Child thriller at the Watermark’s rooftop lounge with sweeping views of the Brooklyn Bridge and Manhattan skyline, Bill Morin smiled and said, “Take a look around you. The ambience here is fantastic. The chef comes out and asks, ‘Was that meal good enough?’ I didn’t even know the chef at the other place.”

The Watermark is one of several luxury assistedli­ving homes that have

sprung up in the past few years, especially in places like New York City with its many affluent retirees with upmarket tastes and cosmopolit­an demands. Others include the Sunrise at East 56th and Inspīr Carnegie Hill, a purpose-built high-rise on the Upper East Side that opened last spring.

These upscale retirement homes cater to the affluent end of “the silver tsunami” — the coming wave of aging baby boomers who are still socially and culturally active, and who have become accustomed to a certain quality of life.

The vibe at these places is less dreary nursing home and more five-star wellness resort. (Indeed, Watermark has recruited an executive from Canyon Ranch to run its fitness offerings.)

During a recent tour of Watermark, Rocco Bertini, its executive director, pointed out “the several F and B rooms on the property” — hospitalit­y-speak for food and beverage — including the main 140-seat dining room with plush seating and double-height ceiling; a “European-style” cafe with freshly baked pastries, smoothie bar and eco-friendly packaging; and a Mediterran­ean-style gastropub with a pizza oven and exposed brick.

“What we’re selling is a lifestyle,” Bertini said.

Inspīr, meanwhile, brims with opulent finishes and luscious amenities. The soaring, light-filled lobby features a Yamaha grand piano, Roman travertine floors, a green onyx wall and Seguso chandelier. A concert by Yo-Yo Ma at the nearby 92nd Street Y

streams to the in-house TV channel. The 17th floor “sky park” has a wraparound terrace, bistro and lounge with a fireplace. The expansive view of the East River from the 23rd floor penthouse is breathtaki­ng.

One resident, Marilyn Snyder, describes it as “the QE2 on the East River.”

Luxury comes at a high cost. Monthly fees at the Watermark range from $8,295 for studio apartments to $20,295 for a two-bedroom. That does not include a one-time membership fee ($50,000 for independen­t living, $20,000 for assisted living and memory care).

Fees at Inspīr start at $13,500 a month and include room and board, a concierge, and special events and programs. Medical care is extra. A penthouse starts at $29,750

a month.

By contrast, the median cost for assisted living in the United States is about $4,000 a month, according to a recent report by Genworth Financial, an insurance firm. And Medicare isn’t footing the bill at these “private pay” facilities.

Perhaps the strongest concession to boomer vanity is how these rich retirement residences sell a vision of wellness and renewal, and avoid any mention of aging and mortality.

By adopting the look and language of hospitalit­y (at the Watermark, help getting dressed is called a “discreet service”), keeping residents busy with cultural and personal enrichment, and obscuring medical services, these members of the rock ’n’ roll generation don’t feel they are in the old folks’ home. If not for the red pull cords in the showers and at bedsides, residents could fool themselves into thinking they were forever guests at a luxury resort.

Snyder, the Inspīr resident, said the decision to move from her Upper East Side apartment into assisted living was not an easy one. A former actor known profession­ally as Maggie Burke, she still remembers visiting her grandmothe­r in a dreary nursing home with “a little cot bed and rather crude facilities,” and did not want the same for herself, she said. A tour of Inspīr, not far from her old apartment and favorite restaurant­s, changed her mind.

“I decided I would get good health care here and also live in a very luxurious setting,” said Snyder, who declined to give her age.

Snyder started a film club and she’s taking the memoir-writing class.

“I’ve made some lovely friends,” she said. “There’s a very stimulatin­g population.”

Back at the Watermark, Morin was enjoying the view from the rooftop lounge, where he reminisced, “I was sitting up here with a glass of wine and there’s a jazz band playing over here, and I looked up at God in heaven and said, ‘I’m home.’ ”

Morin said his one-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment with its kitchenett­e, marble shower and tasteful modern furniture reminds him of the finest hotels, “but better,” he said, because he’s a resident. The cost is largely covered by a long-term care policy he took out ages ago.

“I’m a lucky dog,” Morin added, pointing out how quickly the elevators there zoom up and down. “I went to four other homes before I came here, OK? This is paradise.”

 ?? GABBY JONES/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Gisela Vellahn, a resident at the Watermark at Brooklyn Heights, a new luxury senior living community, swims in the heated pool Oct. 27. A new crop of luxury senior housing is turning retirement into a five-star resort stay.
GABBY JONES/THE NEW YORK TIMES Gisela Vellahn, a resident at the Watermark at Brooklyn Heights, a new luxury senior living community, swims in the heated pool Oct. 27. A new crop of luxury senior housing is turning retirement into a five-star resort stay.

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