Regina Leader-Post

INTERGENER­ATIONAL LIVING

Orange Tree Village a vibrant place

- ASHLEY ROBINSON

When Jared and Abby Wolfe first told their friends and family they were moving everyone was confused. Why would two young university students want to live in a place with a bunch of seniors?

“It really struck me that (Orange Tree Village was) building a great sense of community and that it was going to be a very interestin­g and engaging experience to be here,” Abby said.

Orange Tree Village is an intergener­ational community where university students, like Abby and Jared, live among seniors and children attending daycare — a first of its kind in Regina.

The facility has five parts — an early learning centre, university student living quarters, a licensed personal care home, assisted living suites and general public facilities.

“We’re trying to really create that fun, young, vibrant community feel so that people don’t feel like they need to be a certain age to live here,” said Kelly Tunison, ambassador of intergener­ational living at Orange Tree Living, which operates the complex.

Orange Tree Village is located in Harbour Landing and opened in December and still has suites available.

“It’s something I’m not used to, it’s something I’ll have to get used to,” said Miriam Wheeler, who lives in one of the senior care home suites.

Wheeler was the first resident to move in. She says she is enjoying the brand new building but is still getting used to all of her neighbours — including the younger ones.

The early learning centre is expected to be fully open in April and will have about 90 licensed spots plus a before and after school program. Until then it is operating out of some vacant apartment suites.

Kids like six-year-old Colton Ahlquist enjoy traditiona­l daycare activities with a twist — senior residents will sometimes join in on the fun. When someone new moves into the building the early learning centre kids will make welcome cards. Recently Ahlquist enjoyed making a card with a big building on it for a new resident.

The personal care home has three different houses with one specifical­ly designed to care for people who have dementia or Alzheimer’s.

“This is a community where everybody can come and live and have it not feel institutio­nal,” Tunison said. There are also assisted living suites where Orange Tree Village offers services like light cleaning and linen washing. “Its not a typical retirement community. It really is intergener­ational in that if somebody with a cognitive disability, for example, maybe just can’t live a hundred per cent independen­tly needs some supports, they can come here.”

Orange Tree Village also includes university student suites. University students can apply to live there with reduced rent, with the stipulatio­n that they have to do 30 hours of work a month in the building.

People from Harbour Landing have access to the building, with free yoga and cooking classes offered weekly. There is also a hair salon, a restaurant and a coffee shop.

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 ?? TROY FLEECE ?? Miriam Wheeler, left, and Colton Ahlquist sit together while Colton has a snack at Orange Tree Living developmen­t in Regina.
TROY FLEECE Miriam Wheeler, left, and Colton Ahlquist sit together while Colton has a snack at Orange Tree Living developmen­t in Regina.

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