Life Designed Around the Way People Actually Live

We intentionally develop and manage luxury Life Plan Communities to support changing needs while preserving independence, dignity, and quality of life.

The strength of our communities is that care is not treated as a separate experience from lifestyle. It is thoughtfully integrated into daily living, allowing Members to remain connected to the people, routines, and environments they know and love.

Whether someone is seeking a vibrant independent lifestyle, additional day-to-day support, specialized memory care, rehabilitation, or skilled nursing services, our communities are designed to provide the right level of support at the right time.

A Full Continuum of Care

The strongest senior living communities are designed not only for today, but for the years ahead. Many of our communities offer a seamless continuum of care, allowing Members to remain within a familiar environment as health needs evolve over time.

This approach provides:

  • Long-term stability
  • Greater peace of mind
  • Simplified transitions
  • Continuity of relationships and care

This is the total package. If she needs nursing care, that will be available, and rehab. As a family member, that takes a huge amount of stress off of me.

And not trying to find that balance of running back and forth. She’s very comfortable here. She’s got what she needs here and she’s not isolated.

And that’s the best part of it. She’s part of a family.

Independent Living

The composition of your days has evolved. Whether it’s more family time, longer stories, additional road miles, or adventures.

The freedom to go where you want, do what you love, and always have somewhere beautiful to come home to. The neighbors who become friends. The dinners worth dressing up for. The days that are yours — completely.

  • Maintenance-free living
  • Fewer stressors
  • Safety of a community
  • Social lifestyle
  • Security & peace of mind

We’re from so many different places. So many backgrounds and families. So many paths taken. No two the same.

We all had dreams. We all had hopes. We’ve all felt love. We’ve all felt pain.

Some of us did more than we ever thought we would and some of us are still waiting.

Growing older has changed a lot about us. But not what’s made us who we are.

We’re still mothers and fathers. Sisters and Brothers.

We’re still Romantics. Free spirits.

We’re still travelers on a journey.

We kept hearing ‘The Best Is Yet To Come’ and they were right. Because now it’s here and we’re going to live it… fully.

There’s still new paths to discover.

So I’ve been a volunteer since March, and I think I probably would be a volunteer even if my mother wasn’t here. The staff here, as I mentioned briefly before, just from the housekeeping, to the CNAs, to the management, the executives, the dedication, enthusiasm.

You see it every single day, every minute of every hour. And it makes it a more enjoyable environment for the residents here because they are very focused on their wellness, of course, socialization, fun, safety and giving them every opportunity to just continue their independence to the extent that they can and just joy living here.

Assisted Living

Personalized support with daily activities while preserving independence, dignity, and engagement in community life.

Support may include:

  • Medication management
  • Dressing and grooming assistance
  • Mobility support
  • Dining assistance
  • Wellness monitoring

Memory Care

Specialized environments and compassionate support for individuals living with Alzheimer’s disease or other forms of dementia.

Focused on:

  • Structure and familiarity
  • Cognitive engagement
  • Safety and security
  • Personalized support
  • Family communication

When we decided to move her, we looked at three things. We looked at the physical plant, the physical building, we wanted something beautiful, we wanted something homey, we wanted something welcoming that she would feel comfortable in.

We also looked at the medical care and to make sure that that was going to be met. And then we looked at the safety, and we wanted to make sure, because she has memory issues, that she was in a safe environment. And we found all three of those here.

You know, it’s become part of our family. We know Marcella. We know Karen, and we know the people there that we speak to them every day.

The activity director in the memory care unit has really been a godsend to us. Mom is not typically a social person. Never has been. Never probably will be. She’s been able to draw her out. She’s really encouraged her to get involved.

And then when the days when she doesn’t want to get involved, she respects that as well. So we’ve seen mom bowling. We’ve seen her painting. We’re seeing her do things that she would have never done before had it not been for the activities director. So we’re very, very grateful for that.

It was important to me to come to a continuing care community. I just arbitrarily decided that I was going to move at age 75 and not make somebody else have to clear out my house. And of course, coming before you have to is a very wise move, because when a year ago I had to have surgery, being already here was greatly helpful.

After being in the hospital for two weeks, I came here to skilled nursing and for four and a half weeks, and I came in in a wheelchair. And then when I left, I was able to walk out on my own. I was back in a somewhat familiar setting.

Skilled nursing was different from my own home. But still, I knew a lot of the people who were over there whom I’d seen over several years of being here. So I just felt more like I was coming home.

But again, there was just a greater convenience and of being in an area where there was already concern and care for me. It was one of the smartest moves I ever made.

I knew things would change. And as I said, being here already at the time I had heart surgery made that situation a great deal easier. In the future if I should need assisted living or skilled nursing again or memory care and so on, the transition will be much easier.

Skilled Nursing

24-hour licensed nursing care for individuals requiring ongoing medical support and clinical oversight.

Services may include:

  • Complex medical care
  • Recovery support
  • Chronic condition management
  • Long-term nursing care

Rehabilitation Services

Short-term rehabilitation programs focused on restoring strength, mobility, and independence following illness, injury, or surgery.

Therapies may include:

  • Physical therapy
  • Occupational therapy
  • Speech therapy

I actually grew up with my grandmother. I’ve lived with her since I was eight years old, and we are very, very close. She’s like my mother.

She is currently 92 years old and she was living at her home. One night she had terrible back pain, took her to the E.R., and they wanted to do surgery, which led her to having to be confined to a wheelchair.

After seeing my grandmother laying in a bed with a diaper on in just a closet sized room and nurses not even coming by to check on her, it killed me. Your therapy here and the place in general has done wonders for her. I mean, and for our family.

I cannot tell you the turnaround. She went from laying in the bed, then calling hospice, saying that she may have a couple weeks to live, that, you know, it’s over, to here we are a year later and she is walking.

I just have never seen a place like it. And I was terrified about, you know, when older people get older, where they’re going to go, you know, what kind of place, because you hear horror stories. I mean, you hear horror stories.

And I actually can go home and sleep good at night knowing that she’s here.

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