Call & Times

Retirement living lures seniors to campuses

- By MARTIN Z. BRAUN

A growing number of retirees are opting to spend their Golden Years living close to a university campus. Or, in the case of Purchase College, on it.

Later this month, a non-profit organizati­on affiliated with Purchase plans to sell $14.5 million in unrated tax-exempt notes to begin developmen­t of a 385-unit retirement community on its 500-acre campus. Known as Broadview, the community is on a 40-acre parcel near the college’s performing arts center and Neuberger Museum of Art.

The project will include a “learning commons” with classrooms, studio and performanc­e spaces. Residents and students at the college -- part of the State University of New York system based in Westcheste­r County, 25 miles north of New York City, can use the space for lectures, seminars and performanc­es.

Residents will “be involved in the museum and the performing arts center, they’ll be mentors to our students,” said Purchase College President Thomas Schwarz, in a telephone interview. “We really want it to be integrated.”

Broadview is the latest publicly-financed developmen­t to capitalize on demand from retirees to live in communitie­s near universiti­es where they can take classes, attend art exhibits and sports events, and maintain a connection to their alma mater.

Developers have built senior communitie­s near the University of Texas, the University of Florida, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Oberlin College, Duke University and Penn State, among others.

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