Luxury retirement care settings thrive

Billions of dollars invested as industry sets sights on baby-boomer generation

The restaurant at Fountaingrove Lodge has a sweeping view of California's Sonoma County, a panorama one might expect at a five-star resort. The grounds include an impressive wine cellar, a spa, a bank, a fitness center, a movie theater and a large outdoor swimming pool.

"I love the water aerobic courses," said William Baird, 71.

But Fountaingrove Lodge is a not a resort -- it is a retirement community, part of a new breed of luxury supportive senior-citizen housing. These upscale communities offer a continuum of care from independent living to failing health, allowing people to age in one place for a relatively fixed price, but with amenities common in exclusive hotels and high-end cruise ships.

Now, as the baby-boom generation is about to enter its most senior years, billions of dollars are being invested in a building surge for high-end housing. The investments will test limits of consumer spending in an industry where regulations are inconsistent or lacking, and contracts are criticized for being confusing and complex.

The potential market is huge. By some industry estimates, 20 percent of baby boomers, or about 15 million people, have saved enough to afford private continuing care, with many expected to demand a very high standard of living.

Baird and his husband, John Kennedy, moved to Sonoma in 2013 from San Francisco. Baird was skeptical of retirement communities, but "we loved the design. The quality of the finishes is quite good. It's what you'd do in your own home."

The community had made news as one of the first retirement communities marketed to older gay and transgender people, a group that gay-rights activists said has historically faced discrimination at care facilities. Baird and Kennedy bought an 1,800-square-foot apartment.

Fountaingrove Lodge is part of a category of housing called a Continuing Care Retirement Community. Industry experts said there were nearly 2,000 of these continuing care communities nationwide with about 700,000 residents. Many require entrance fees and monthly charges that cover services, care and food.

"You're basically investing in your future health care and future needs," said Stephen Maag, director of residential communities for LeadingAge, an association that represents organizations and businesses in the aging industry. "Then whatever you need within the continuum the community provides will be covered. So you're basically locking in what you're going to have to pay for the rest of your life."

Maag said the average age nationwide of people entering the communities is the low 80s. Residents tend to stay seven to 10 years.

Entrance fees average about $300,000, but in the luxury category that can be substantially higher. Entrance fees for the largest units at Fountaingrove Lodge, two-bedroom bungalows, are about $1 million, with monthly charges of more than $6,000.

"Our occupancy rate is 100 percent," said Robert May, executive director, in October. May said there were 100 residents and a waiting list of nearly 70. (The need is acute for any housing in Sonoma County after last year's wildfires destroyed thousands of houses.)

Similar luxury communities have opened or are in development in Southern California and Arizona.

Recently Related Cos. of New York reported a partnership with Atria Senior Living, a housing management company, to develop, own and operate $3 billion of upscale supportive housing for older people in the nation's top urban centers, including New York City, San Francisco, Boston, Los Angeles, Miami and Washington.

"For our whole careers, we've been in the luxury housing business," said Bryan Cho, executive vice president of Related Cos. "So we're very excited about channeling all that talent into providing the best-in-class environment for seniors."

Although early in the process, the Related-Atria plan is to offer rentals and not charge entrance fees.

Those fees can be confusing and daunting, often representing a large portion of someone's savings or the proceeds from the sale of a home. Unlike a traditional property purchase, there is no real estate agent advocating for the buyer, and the industry is not federally regulated. Only 38 states have varying regulations, and contracts can be complex.

For example, sometimes portions of entrance fees go to residents' estates upon their deaths, or are refunded when people leave. But getting those funds back could take months or years waiting for the unit to be resold. And there has been litigation over refund policies.

Because people have little control over how or when their units are resold, New Jersey recently passed a law that required operators to issue refunds in the order that units were vacated. That means getting paid back "when the next unit is sold, rather than when your unit is sold," said Katherine Pearson, a professor at Dickinson Law School at Pennsylvania State University, an expert in Continuing Care Retirement Communities.

Continuing care communities in varying forms have existed for decades, first as faith-based institutions to support widows. They evolved into communities that appealed to people who have saved for retirement and have a vision for how they would like to live.

"Maybe you want to go in while you're still healthy and you can really enjoy yourself and find people and build a life," said Sandy Lieberman, owner of SeniorSource, a San Diego company that matches older people locally with housing options. "These are people with money," Lieberman said, noting that the vast majority of older Americans do not have these levels of resources.

Experts say the luxury sector has been small, but with 10,000 Americans turning 65 years old every day, that is about to change -- it is nicknamed the "me" generation for a reason.

"Baby boomers are being a very demanding customer," said Maag, adding that the industry must respond "to a consumer that has pushed back on everything they've touched in the last 60 years."

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