The Mercury News

Proposed expansion has some residents worried

- By Hannah Kanik hkanik @bayareanew­sgroup.com

The Saratoga Retirement Community, nestled in the foothills above the city's heritage orchard, is facing an ambitious expansion project to make room for more local seniors, but current residents say the project will impact their quality of life and the character of the historic campus.

The expansion project at SRC, located at 14500 Fruitvale Ave., would expand its capacity by 52 independen­t living units with the constructi­on of three new buildings.

First proposed in 2019, the project will head to the planning commission sometime this year, with several opportunit­ies for public review. Earlier this month, the city hosted a meeting to discuss the project's draft environmen­tal impact report, and more than 400 residents sent in public comment letters against the project's proposed design.

Constructi­on noise, air pollution and impacts to traffic are top concerns among the residents at SRC.

“In a way, we really feel that this is discrimina­tion,” said Tsing Bardin, a member of the residents group Preserve SRC Campus. “We have special mobility issues, eyesight issues, hearing and the reaction time. … This is a retirement community.”

Staff at SRC say the expansion will increase available housing for local seniors and satisfy the city's housing growth requiremen­ts.

“We understand resident

frustratio­n when constructi­on occurs on their campus, but we also have to keep these communitie­s current to meet the needs and demands of today's retirees, which have changed dramatical­ly in the last 20 years,” said SRC Executive Director Sarah Stel. “The number of people 85 and above is doubling every decade in Santa Clara County. While some families choose to age in place in their homes, others seek an environmen­t that ensures their needs will be met at every stage of their lives without burdening children or other family members. We want to ensure this campus is here to serve this community as it has been since 1912.”

Saratoga's senior population is on track to outnumber

children by 2030, and senior services and housing are already at maximum capacity.

The SRC currently has 143 independen­t living units and 106 assisted living units, as well as 94 skilled nursing beds. The expansion would bring the total number of units to 301.

Living at the SRC is pricey: Most residents pay $750,000 to $1 million for a down payment. Bardin says she pays $7,500 a month to rent her two-bedroom, 1200-square-foot apartment, which includes utilities, food and services.

“We paid and are paying considerab­le money, with our entry and monthly fees, for a quiet and safe environmen­t for the rest of our retirement lives, not expecting this kind of disruption

in the last years of our lives,” Bardin said.

In addition to the new living units, the project includes a meeting room and a fitness center. To construct the new buildings, 68 trees would be removed and the campus' central park — the SRC's only outdoor space for recreation­al activities — would be the site of a new residentia­l building.

Another building would sit directly in front of the Saratoga Manor and block the view of the iconic structure, Bardin said. Saratoga Manor is listed on the city's historic sites inventory and is reminiscen­t of Hearst Castle.

Preserve SRC Campus has been offering alternativ­e design options and has been trying to work with the leadership team at SRC.

“We reviewed it and shared with them the reasons that their proposed approach doesn't work financiall­y, and that was before interest rates and inflation rose to today's new heights,” Stel said. “The current master plan would build the expansion project in phases to allow new independen­t living residents to move in to the community and contribute to the capital and operationa­l costs associated with renovating the health center. The Preserve SRC plan would require the constructi­on of a brand-new health center to be financed and built without any additional income from new independen­t living residents, which poses tremendous financial risks.”

The SRC was built back in 1912 and was owned by the Independen­t Order of Odd Fellows and Rebekah's, one of the oldest fraternal orders in the world. The facility saw its first major expansion project in 1999 when Pacific Retirement Services took over management of SRC.

The project completely renovated the Saratoga Manor building and added more apartment homes and cottages, among other amenities.

As constructi­on looms, Bardin said she and the rest of the SRC residents cherish the facility.

“It's a very vibrant community. The best thing is the people, the residents. I made so many good friends when I came here,” Bardin said. “They are intelligen­t. They're interestin­g. [It's a] great place to live, a really great place.”

 ?? PATRICK TEHAN — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Proposed work at the Saratoga Retirement Community would expand its capacity by 52 independen­t living units with the constructi­on of three buildings. Residents are concerned that one of the new buildings would block the view of the iconic Saratoga Manor.
PATRICK TEHAN — STAFF ARCHIVES Proposed work at the Saratoga Retirement Community would expand its capacity by 52 independen­t living units with the constructi­on of three buildings. Residents are concerned that one of the new buildings would block the view of the iconic Saratoga Manor.

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