Retire right here
- The elderly need a space for a full life without being moved away to exclusive communities
- K. Murali Kumar Retirement flats allow couples to take it easy and feel safe
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A new idea sees developers assigning a part of their regular
projects towards fully planned retirement flats, thus bringing the
elderly into the mainstream. Vaishna Roy reports
“We don’t believe in pushing people into separate
communities,” says Arun Gupta, the affable CEO of Age Ventures India
(AVI). That in a nutshell sums up what this non-profit venture is trying
to do for senior housing in the country. In a new and welcome move, AVI
is teaming up with developers to persuade them to convert a portion of
their new projects into elderly-friendly housing units. Thus, rather
than get isolated in retirement homes, the elderly can live and interact
with the larger community and yet be cared for with all the little
frills that make the sunset years carefree.
AVI
liaises with leading developers working on large housing projects or
mini townships and works with them to dedicate 15-20 per cent of their
units into a separate retirement block. “We don’t retire from life, we
just retire from work,” says Gupta. The idea is to provide a setting
where the couple can take it easy, enjoy value-added pursuits, be safe
and yet stay in the mainstream.
AVI ties up with
developers across cities. For instance, it has tied with Shriram
Properties in Chennai, Brigade Group in Bangalore, Ramprastha Property
in Gurgaon, and the ARG Group in Jaipur. In Chennai, 134 of the
1,800-odd apartments at the Shriram Shankari Complex in Guduvanchery
will be set aside for Sanjeevani, the senior living project.
The
idea makes sense in more ways than one. As Ashok Iyer, VP, Shriram
Properties, says, “It’s a purely economic solution. Surging land costs,
even in suburbs, make it unviable for senior citizens. Here, we can even
give them a swimming pool or badminton court.”
Melur
Meadows, an idyllic retirement village in Coimbatore, is talking to
developers for a similar tie-up. Says Maj. Sathyanarayanan, CEO, “The
idea is to move away from exclusive spaces for the elderly and create
inclusive spaces, where they can share common life facilities with the
larger community.” He adds that the elderly need to feel a sense of
belonging, to see younger people. “We must find an Indian solution for
our seniors.”
It is estimated that the 60+ population
in India will touch 240 million by 2050. The demographic is growing at
3.8 per cent per annum compared to the general rate of 1.8 per cent.
Unlike the West, where senior living is a mature industry, India has
woken up to this segment only in the last decade or so. A number of
retirement communities, both middle-end and luxurious, have come up
across the country, but this is the first time that the idea of merging
them with regular housing has been taken up.
It’s a
timely move. As a Jones Lang LaSalle report says, a significant section
of seniors today are independent, financially stable, and
well-travelled. They want to pursue hobbies or social work. They are
healthy and alert and don’t appreciate being shunted out of sight. Then
there’s the NRI phenomenon — children in the West too far away to take
care of parents here but concerned enough to look for holistic
solutions; and NRI retirees who want to come home to world-class senior
spaces.
These units have — besides the basics such as
kitchen and dining room, 24-hour medical and nursing services, security
and green spaces — auditoriums, library and Internet zones, spas and
yoga rooms, hobby and indoor game areas with pottery, painting, carrom
board and more. Even more useful, there are valet and concierge services
to pay bills, book tickets and so on. Says Gupta: “AVI has even
collaborated with SRM University for seniors to take coaching or special
classes there.” Owners pay a monthly fee for catering, medical and
other value-added services to AVI, which outsources these functions.
AVI
has tied up with Help Age India for training its staff in geriatric
issues and for help in setting up counselling and physio centres. It has
also tied up with MHA, UK for laying down policies, procedures and
safety standards. MHA will also carry out annual audits.
The
block comes with an assisted living facility that a couple can move
into if needed. This echoes the gloabl trend for continuing care, where a
single campus provides the range of services from independent and
assisted living to skilled nursing care.
As Gupta
says, “If a retirement home is really good, nobody should need to move
out.” And if retirees can spend their sunset years in a sunrise
environment, it sounds like a great solution.
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