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Boomers Flock to Niche Retirement Communities

Stargazers, equestrians, and hippies find like-minded friends and age together

April 13, 2012 RSS Feed Print

Retirement communities aren't just geared toward golfers and pool loungers anymore. Niche retirement communities are on the rise, says Andrew Carle, the founding director of George Mason University's Senior Housing Administration, a management program for retirement facilities. "Retirees want more choices," Carle explains. "When you have 78 million baby boomers, they have a lot of expectations with retirement."

Carle adds that the market for niche retirement communities will continue to explode. "This is just the tip of the iceberg," he says. "The days where your only choices are assisted living or a nursing home are long gone."

Specialized retirement communities fit retirees' needs for a variety of hobbies and cultures. The most popular are university-based retirement communities, which Carle refers to as UBRCs, which offer retirees the opportunity to attend campus events, like concerts and arts programs, as well as sit in on classes. Kendal, a retirement community near Oberlin College in Ohio, capitalizes on its relationship with the school by having string quartets perform at its facility. About 37 percent of Kendal residents are alumni or former faculty and staff of the school, according to the community's website.

Other niche retirement communities offer a more unique experience. The national average rent for an assisted living community in 2011 was $3,477 monthly, according to a Metlife Market Survey. Here's a look at seven that break the mold without breaking the bank, according to Carle, who says they're equivalent in price to regular retirement communities.

Express yourself. Burbank Senior Artists Colony in Burbank, Calif., targets a specific demographic: aspiring artists. Americans looking to paint well into their 60s and 70s or write their first novel can do it at Burbank. The 141-unit community boasts a 40-seat performance theater, artist studios and classrooms, a library, and art display galleries. Rent runs between $1,300 and $1,900 per month, not including healthcare services.

Shoot for the stars. Astronomy lovers can gaze at the stars among others with an affinity for the night sky at Chiefland Astronomy Village in Chiefland, Fla. The village's skies aren't affected by light pollution as much as some other spots, which explains why stargazers flock to the community, where nearly every home has a built-in telescope.

Take flight. Aviators gather at Spruce Creek Fly-In, a community just a few miles south of Daytona Beach, Fla. Built around a training facility used by the Navy in the mid-1970s, Spruce Creek was formed by a group of aviators from Atlanta. "They thought this would be a great way to combine a place for their business in the sky and a place to raise their families," says Ken Renner, a 54-year-old resident. Renner raised his daughter at Spruce Creek and has lived in the community for more than 20 years.

Renner's home is one of more than 1,500 in the area. The community comes together for events like the annual Wings & Wheels Day, a celebration of Spruce Creek's love of cars, motorcycles, and airplanes. Aside from aviation, the community offers a country club with an 18-hole golf course, tennis courts, swimming pool, and social groups for everything from kayaking to quilting.

Live well. Health enthusiasts rejoice at Fox Hills Club, a Bethesda, Md., retirement community with a calling card of "wellness" offerings for the mind, body, and spirit. Retirees take advantage of the gym, which is stocked with Keiser athletic machines designed for elite athletes but well-suited for seniors, a full-service spa, three health-conscious gourmet restaurants, organic herb garden, indoor golf range, putting green, outdoor walking trails, swimming pool with electronic lifts, and onsite physical therapy. If that's not enough to burn off the calories, there are daily classes including water aerobics as well as an onsite personal trainer. Units are for sale and priced between $600,000 and $2 million, according to the New York Times.

Tags:
community,
senior health,
retirement,
senior citizens,
money

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To Mukluks,

If you "won't miss the USA" then why not get out now? We don't want you here, and we don't need you.

By the way, did you know that if it wasn't for taxpaying Americans like me, there would be no state of Israel for you to retire to. That's right. The USA gives Israel about 10 million dollars a day. We also make multi-billion dollar loans that (wink) we never expect to have paid off, and oh yeah, one more thing, the USA also promises to buy about 100 million dollars a year in defense contract goods from Israeli war and weapons manufacturers.

So before you go slamming the United States of America, do your homework, ok little Miss? And show some respect and gratitude to the country that keeps Israel on the map, and does so at the expense of having most of the world furious with us for doing so.

And you're not a boomer, and "thank God". What do you mean by that? Explain yourself! I'm proud of my generation, and we're neither better nor worse than other - and what has your generation done for the world?

And by the way, as I write this letter, two blocks away from my little condo, men and woman are using dogs in Copley Square to find the body parts of human beings blown up today in the Marathon Monday Terrorist Attack.

Yeah, we pay the price all right, and it's not only money.

Shame on you!

Kevin of MA 9:07PM April 15, 2013

The reality is most seniors facing retirement cannot afford the places in this article. Sad but true. I see the types of places they can afford and they are less to be desired.

Diane of PA 8:23AM April 27, 2012

I am retired, but work part-time. As soon as my house is paid off in five more years, I am retiring (God willing) with my husband to live in Israel in our own place (small village) next to a good sized city in northern Israel. His family lives near-by. I will not miss the U.S.A.

P.S. I am not a boomer, thank God!

Mukluks of AZ 11:38PM April 26, 2012

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