Return to Virginia Business - August 2003

Retirement Living

No maintenance please
Retirees’ active lifestyles drive change in building industry

Related links:
- Expansions in retirement communities around Virginia
- Directory of communities with retirement living

by Paula C. Squires
Virginia Business
August 2003

Jane Anderson will miss her 18th-century garden. Husband Duke hates to give up the handsome bar where friends gathered for conversation. Yet these retirees decided it was time to scale down from the 3,400-square-foot dream home they built at Ford’s Colony in Williamsburg a decade ago. Now in their 70s, the couple worried about keeping up such a big place. So, they sold it and are building a smaller home in a new, no-maintenance section of Ford’s Colony.

While moving at any age is difficult, the Andersons focus on the positives: They’re keeping their neighborhood, friends and activities. Plus, they’ll never have to mow the grass. Ditto for raking leaves, cleaning gutters, or shoveling snow. A monthly fee of $135 will cover exterior house and yard maintenance, year-round. Duke, 75, who had a pacemaker implanted in his heart last year, looks forward to the freedom. And he’s excited about building another new home. “The idea of building something again keeps you young,” he says.

The no-maintenance lifestyle, desired by retirees, empty nesters and even some working professionals, is so popular that it’s driving change in the building industry. These homes, built with brick, vinyl siding and other durable materials, are becoming a large part of builder portfolios. In fact, builders and developers say they can hardly keep up with demand as the huge baby boomer generation moves toward retirement and older adults live longer. “It’s the wave of the future, there’s no doubt about it,” says Charles Pysher, director of marketing for Ford’s Colony. “Maintenance-free is what customers are after. They don’t care if it’s a stand-alone home, a condo or a villa.”


Fueling the trend are two factors: the sheer number of aging people and today’s active retirees. “For the next 20 years low maintenance is here to stay,” says Leslie Marks, executive director of the National Council on Seniors Housing for the National Association of Home Builders. “We know that the growth of the 55 to 65 age group will grow about 72 percent. The age group behind them, 45 to 54, will grow 5 percent. These people are active, well educated, healthy and they want to enjoy life.”

Escaping the burden of maintenance — at least on the outside — is one way retirees free up time for the important things in life such as traveling, writing and visiting children and friends. When lots went on sale this spring in Nottingham, Ford’s Colony’s first no-maintenance section, the sales staff sold 18 of 73 lots the first weekend. Prices there start at $90,000 for a quarter of an acre. By the time buyers put up a home, they can expect at least a $300,000 price tag. That’s less than many of the homes in the upscale community, located minutes from the College of William and Mary and Williamsburg’s historic village. Nottingham is the latest option in the mixed-age, award-winning development, which offers picturesque lakes, a country club, three golf courses, swimming, tennis and walking trails. The no-maintenance section will be set apart and gated, providing the sense of security many retirees crave. It also offers a community plot for gardening, an attractive feature for people like Jane, who wants to continue her favorite outdoor hobby.

Across Virginia — indeed the country — the story’s the same. Low or no-maintenance homes in mixed or age-restricted communities are being snatched up. And while retiree living may mean scaling down in size, many older buyers are stepping up in style. They’re asking for two-car garages, Florida rooms, first-floor master suites, his and her closets and oversized tubs. In addition, the 55 and over crowd — whose children have flown the nest — seek amenities to complement their new carefree lifestyle. Many want a clubhouse where they can socialize with peers and home designs that will age along with them. Some builders are offering ground-level entrances, wider halls and doorways and higher countertops — measures that would accommodate a wheelchair should mobility become impaired in later years.

For more ideas on age-proofing retiree homes, builders can visit a national demonstration project, the Lifewise Home in Bowie, Md. Built in 2002 by the National Association of Home Builders Research Center, it showcases designs and products — non-slip tile floors, task lighting, easy-to-open windows, levered faucets — that help older adults live safely and independently. “One of the more interesting trends is that we’re starting to get architectural recognition for homes that promote aging in place,” says Andy Kochera, a senior policy advisor with the AARP Public Policy Institute in Washington. The challenge for builders, adds Kochera, is to make homes accessible without alienating healthy buyers who aren’t ready yet to think about the need for grab bars in the shower. “No one is going to tell their client, ‘Well, you’re going to get older and more frail, so you need this,’” says Kochera.

Developers would rather tout the multi-million dollar clubhouse/recreation centers that are the focal points of adult communities. Slenker Land Corp. in Burke typically spends $3 million to $4 million on a clubhouse that will serve a community of 500 to 1,000 homes and another $30 million to $50 million on infrastructure for these resort-style communities. The company got into the adult-housing market in 1995 when a Raleigh project mandated a certain number homes for people 55 and over. The project did well, so company President Bill Slenker began studying the demographics. About 20 percent of Virginia’s population is 55 and older, according to the most recent census. In 2001, homeownership nationwide for households headed by someone age 50 and older was 80 percent. “A builder who is not in this business just hasn’t done his homework,” says Slenker.

Today, the product represents 80 percent of his company’s business. Currently, Slenker has 3,000 no-maintenance units up or under construction in four states — Virginia, Maryland, Delaware and North Carolina — making it the 20th-largest developer of active-adult housing in the U.S. One of the industry’s biggest players, Del Webb Communities — with 13 developments across the country — continues to build out its first Virginia project, Falls Run in Fredericksburg.

Like Dell Webb, Slenker’s niche is building age-restricted communities for people 55 and older. It’s building a new community in Loudoun County called Central Parke at Lowes Island. Located in the Lowes Island golf course community, the development will offer 56 villas and 125 condominiums. The one-level, 2,100-square-foot villas sell in the mid to high $400,000 range, while starting prices for condos with elevator service are in the high $200,000s. The prices are higher than Slenker’s average price tag of $250,000, because Central Parke is a golf course community. Nevertheless, the company sold 32 units the first weekend, and sales continue to be strong. Low mortgage interest rates and cash accumulated from the sale of principal homes put no-maintenance homes easily within the reach of many retirees.
To keep residents busy and healthy, Slenker communities offer indoor and outdoor pools, fitness equipment designed for older adults and educational programs. “We have professors, dietitians and investment advisors who come in and give classes,” says Slenker. Residents pick up mail at a central pavilion, which has a coffee shop, where they can catch up on the latest gossip. Slenker communities offer no-maintenance living for yards and exteriors with monthly fees ranging from $150 to $200 a month. Typically, a community’s homeowner’s association hires a contractor who is responsible for the maintenance. Condo owners pay additional fees to cover maintenance costs for an entire building and common areas. Even in a retiree community, people are responsible for their home’s interior, although some places provide recommendations and numbers for repair services.

Living in a 55-plus community may not be everyone’s idea of retirement heaven, but Alta Mae Gibson says it has given her a new lease on life. A year ago, she and her husband sold their home of 32 years in Glen Allen outside Richmond and moved down the road to CrossRidge, a new 400-unit adult community. For about $270,000 the Gibsons purchased a low-maintenance, two-story, 2,700-square-foot attached carriage house. It has a sprinkler and security system, an open floor plan with a large kitchen, a downstairs master suite and two upstairs bedrooms for guests. Alta Mae, 69, is relieved that 72-year-old Robert has no more yard chores. “I didn’t want him cutting the grass twice a week and getting up on the roof to clean gutters.” Now the couple spends their time planning covered-dish socials and chatting with neighbors, who gather nearly every evening in the couple’s driveway. “The fellowship out here is unbelievable,” gushes Alta Mae.

A socially active lifestyle is part of the draw for communities like CrossRidge, developed by Atack Properties and Eagle Construction of Virginia. Activities Director Bernie Deisler, a baby boomer himself, plans everything from day trips to bridge and kickback Friday night parties by the pool. “These people want to play and enjoy the fruits of their labors,” he says. At CrossRidge, monthly maintenance fee ranges from $110 to $170 — depending on whether residents live in town homes, which cost about $191,750 for 1,828 square feet — or the larger, more expensive carriage homes. In addition, residents pay $125 a quarter to the main homeowners’ association, which gives them access to the pool, clubhouse and other amenities.

Adding a section of low-maintenance homes in more traditional planned residential communities has worked well for some builders, including Boone Homes Inc. in Richmond. Boone got into the market about four years ago while building in Wyndham, a golf course community in Henrico County. The all-brick villas there sold so well that the company built even fancier villas in the $300,000 to $400,000 price range at Founders Bridge, a new golf course community that straddles Chesterfield and Powhatan counties. The low-maintenance villas — with monthly maintenance fees of $165 — have nearly sold out. “More people are retiring early,” notes company CEO David Owen. “It’s probably about 30 percent of our building now. We feel that it will grow to about half of our business. It’s a demographic shifting.”

In mixed-age communities, Owen might have spotted another trend. At Wyndham he has one client who moved his family into a new single family home and then talked his mother into moving into a low-maintenance villa in another part of the development. “Children want their parents nearby. Now kids can ride their bikes over to see her, and the family can go to the pool together. But the mother still has the autonomy of having her own home.” Sounds like a pretty good set up. And she won’t be calling her son to cut her grass.

Return to Virginia Business - August 2003