The Denver Post

Some housing developers are adding a concierge for your spiritual life

- By Candace Jackson © The New York Times Co.

The Jardine apartments in Los Angeles have all the trappings of luxury living in 2021: touchless elevators, a rooftop gym and a pool with private cabanas. And then there’s a more unusual amenity: a “spiritual concierge” who can set residents up with everything from full moon intention ceremonies to sound baths.

Looking to woo buyers and renters who are open to the, well, woo-woo, several new developmen­ts around the country are offering meditation, healers, shaman and spiritual concierge programs — taking wellness offerings several steps beyond on-site yoga and Pilates. In an age of self-care and mental health awareness, developers are hoping the offerings will appeal to those who have embraced spirituali­ty as part of a wellness lifestyle. But will they scare away buyers and renters on a more traditiona­l journey?

At Gardenhous­e at 8600 Wilshire in Beverly Hills, there will be monthly spiritual experience­s on-site tied to lunar cycles. A cacao ceremony — that’s a shaman-lead “healing” that involves blessing and then drinking a traditiona­l bitter chocolate, intention setting and dancing or movement — is on the menu. There is also a “full moon intention ceremony,” where participan­ts verbalize and write down things they would like to let go of in journals (crystals, visualizat­ion and sage burning can also be iners. volved). The events will take place in the building’s atrium, an architectu­ral open-air space with black Venetian plaster walls and a huge fountain with a reflecting pool.

“It really aligns with the goal of bringing wellness into the homes of our buyers,” said Mike Disilva, the Los Angeles-based developmen­t manager for the project. The 18-unit condominiu­m also has what they claim is the largest living wall in America. Condo prices start at $2.95 million.

Eran Polack, developer of Maverick, in New York’s Chelsea neighborho­od, was skeptical when his marketing and sales team first came to him with the idea of hiring a spiritual concierge. “My first reaction as a New Yorker was, ‘that sounds like a very California thing,’ ” he said.

John Gomes, the building’s listing agent, talked him into it. Gomes first tried hypnothera­py after his husband died, a little less than a year ago, and was hooked.

“But I will say, it’s a bit of a secret society,” he said. Figuring out how to find honest practition­ers and learning about the various treatments was overwhelmi­ng.

“So we thought, ‘Wow, what if we could provide this as an amenity to the benefit of our clients and provide them a one-stop shop, so you don’t have to go out there and figure it out yourself ?’ ”

These concierges will not have fixed desks in building lobbies, but will be available via email or phone to consult with residents upon request.

Polack said he thought spiritual offerings could appeal to millennial buyers who want both amenities and “content,” including onsite and virtual events. “I’m not a spiritual person, I have to be honest with you,” he said. “I’m a real estate developer trying to build a building and a program people will enjoy.” Unlike allotting valuable square footage for yoga decks and saunas, the spiritual concierge program is available at no or little cost to developers. Residents generally will pay for services themselves.

Other developers are bringing their own spiritual practices to their customIn Columbus, Ohio, Gravity, a sprawling new developmen­t on a site with 10 acres so far, includes a Transcende­ntal Meditation center. (Transcende­ntal Meditation involves a silent, repeated mantra.) Brett Kaufman, the developer, has been practicing 20 years, he said.

He described the developmen­t as a “conscious community,” that takes a holistic approach to a wellness lifestyle.

“The physical health thing is important — we have gyms, we have trainers and yoga studios and running clubs,” he said. “But we believe we need to treat the mental health and spiritual side of things with the same level of importance.”

Kaufman said plans also called for a location for mental health profession­als, therapists and life coaches called Innerspace, a convenient on-site amenity for residents that will also be open to the general public. (Gravity has retail space, offices and will have more than 1,000 residentia­l units when completed, including rental apartments and coliving spaces.)

Some developers and real estate agents say that in the wake of the COVID crisis and a year spent in near isolation, wellness messaging is more appealing than ever.

“There’s a national conversati­on happening around mental health,” said Justin Alvaji, Jardine’s senior community manager. “We wanted our tenants to feel like the building was a sanctuary and wanted to go the extra mile.”

Aree Khodai, a spiritual concierge, said she would work as connector and coach for residents participat­ing in the new program. It is something she has been doing informally for friends and acquaintan­ces for years, introducin­g them to various shaman and vetted spiritual practition­ers she knows personally through her work as a yoga teacher and healer.

“We’re tapping into something that’s already happening,” she said. In her past work, she has connected clients with everything from movement classes to edgier experience­s like mushroom micro-dosing, which she described as “a journey,” with “an intention behind it and a sense of lessons and insights.” (Gardenhous­e and several others are partnering with a third-party provider that Khodai works with to provide the spiritual concierge services.)

On a recent afternoon, she walked through Jardine’s $20,000-a-month penthouse, which was staged but still unrented. She thought it could be a potential space for a healing ceremony.

“It’s almost like blessing the space,” she said.

The building, which is on the Netflix campus in Hollywood, opened in May, with rents averaging around $4,900 per month.

Alvaji, of Jardine, admits that sound baths and full moon ceremonies aren’t for everyone.

“If this isn’t your cup of tea, no problem,” he said. “Just come join us next week by the pool.”

 ?? Ryan West, via © The New York Times Co. ?? Leah Forester, a ceremonial­ist, leads the first spiritual concierge community event at Jardine, a new apartment complex on the campus of Netflix in Los Angeles.
Ryan West, via © The New York Times Co. Leah Forester, a ceremonial­ist, leads the first spiritual concierge community event at Jardine, a new apartment complex on the campus of Netflix in Los Angeles.

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