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IN YOUR INTEREST

22

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THE INVESTOR

golden years

How retirement communities are helping pensioners

to live life to the full with like-minded neighbours

By Jill Insley

I

f the word‘retirement’ conjures

up images of rattling around in a

large family home, struggling to

manage the garden, the bills and,

eventually, the stairs, it may be

time for a rethink.Many of today’s retirees

are living life to the full, thanks to a new

way of retiring that is taking off in the UK.

Retirement communities or villages

are designed to enable people to

continue to live independently for as

long as

possible.At

first glance these

developments look like any others in

the UK: the properties are typically

one- or two-bedroom self-contained

flats or bungalows, usually within a gated

community. Look a bit closer and you

will notice special design details that

mean the properties can be adapted to

the needs of their occupants as they age.

Doorways are wider to allow

wheelchair access, bathroom walls are

strengthened to enable the fitting of

grab rails, there are walk-in showers

rather than baths, ovens are raised

for easy access and alarm buttons are

installed discreetly to enable residents

to summon help.

Residents have their own bathrooms and

kitchens, and can live in complete privacy

if they so choose. But it is the opportunity

to meet other people within a similar

age range that undoubtedly attracts most

buyers.AtWherry Court, a McCarthy &

Stone development of 49 apartments in

Thorpe StAndrew just outside Norwich,

apartment owners share an extensive and

well-maintained garden and a communal

living room.When I visited on a sunny

Tuesday afternoon, several residents had

congregated in the living room for a‘knit

and natter’ session. In the laundry room,

Battersea Place, by LifeCare Residences, Zack Canepari/Panos