High housing prices chasing some seniors
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Alicia Robinson
Today’s 55-and-older crowd is a diverse one, and the future of the
senior housing market should be equally eclectic, said John Burns,
who owns an Irvine-based real estate consulting business.
“It’s going to become a very segmented industry,” Burns said.
“People want very different things.”
Burns discussed the outlook for senior housing Thursday at a
meeting of the Senior Housing Council of the Building Industry of
Southern California.
“We’re finding seniors buying in every single community,” Burns
said.
People older than 55 can’t really be lumped into one category,
Burns said. Many are continuing to work and choosing not to live in
age-restricted communities, he said.
In fact, there are few retirement communities in the Newport-Mesa
area. Several builders are now trying to design communities that
appeal to a broad range of buyers, Burns said. Older people are
looking for homes with “universal design” features, such as lever
door handles instead of doorknobs because they’re easier for people
with arthritis to turn.
“The important thing, I think, is to build all homes with these
people in mind,” he said.
Many seniors are looking for one-story homes that are convenient
to shopping and transportation, Newport Beach real estate agent
Maxine Mink said.
Most senior clients Mink has handled lately have been selling
homes and moving out of the area rather than buying, she said.
“We just don’t have a lot of houses available strictly because our
prices have gone so high,” she said.
Those who own a home have been positively affected by Orange
County’s skyrocketing real estate prices. But if they’re looking to
buy, seniors on fixed incomes may find themselves priced out of the
market.
There’s not much housing out there that’s affordable for seniors,
said Aviva Goelman, executive director of the Costa Mesa Senior
Center.
“We find that that is always a problem with seniors, to find
inexpensive, safe and nice housing, because most of them are on a
fixed income,” she said. “Costa Mesa is getting more expensive
because it’s more desirable. People who can’t afford to go to Newport
come to Costa Mesa.”
The market for assisted-living housing here is starting to
rebound, said Vicki Clark, president of Vintage Senior Management in
Newport Beach.
Clark’s business offers assisted living and Alzheimer’s care at
Avalon at Newport. A $2-million renovation of the facility’s
buildings will be complete in February.
The assisted-living industry suffered from the nation’s recent
economic slump, but in the last six months business has been stable,
she said.
“It’s been two tough years for our industry, [but] we are finding
that there is a turnaround,” Clark said.
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