(LONGVIEW, Texas) – Buckner Westminster Place, a Buckner Retirement Services community, will celebrate the grand opening of its new Green House homes Saturday, Dec. 8 with an open house for the media at 9 a.m. and for the general public at 1:00 p.m. at 2201 Horseshoe Lane.
“After many months of construction, this will be an exciting day for us and the whole community,” said executive director Glenn Shoemake. “The new Green House construction is going to place Longview on the map as a leader in the field of retirement services. It’s a new era – we’re excited to be a part of it.”
The first residents of the Holly and Hawthorne homes – each with a 10-resident capacity – will move in shortly following the Dec. 8 open house.
Debby Bravo, licensed nursing home administrator and Green House guide, said that Buckner will be the first retirement community to embrace the Green House model in Texas; and it’s only the 13th in the nation.
“The eyes of Texas are upon us, but really, the eyes of the nation are upon us,” she said. “We’re on the forefront of this movement, which is expected to grow to nearly 50 homes in the next couple of years.
“This new wave of retirement living is taking off because the Green House model really focuses on the elders. It puts them first. There’s a big difference in being one of 10 residents in a small, home environment and being one of 120 in more institutionalized care.”
The Green House project, created by geriatrician and author William Thomas, focuses on de-institutionalizing long-term care by creating small group homes housing
eight to 10 people. The residents have private bedrooms and bathrooms, open kitchen/living areas called the “Hearth Room,” and are cared for by a nurturing “Shabaz,” or elder assistant. Residents are given universal access within the home and help establish menus, activities and house routines, while nurses make regular visits to assist with medical needs.
The first Green House community was built in Tupelo, Miss. in 2003.
“It is always our desire to provide the best care there is to our residents,” said Pearl Merritt, president of Buckner Retirement Services. “The Green House model is proven to make a difference in the lives of seniors, giving them more independence and greater sense of purpose as they live out their retirement years. This is just another way we can fulfill our mission to enhance the quality of life of senior adults while maintaining their dignity.”
Buckner Westminster Place, a 16-acre lakeside home to independent living, assisted living and memory-impaired senior adults, has operated in Longview since 1996.
About Buckner Retirement Services, Inc.
Rich in heritage and tradition, Buckner has provided a continuum of care to senior adults for more than 100 years, since the first retirement cottages were built on the perimeter of the Buckner Children’s Home in Dallas. Today, with campuses in Austin, Beaumont, Dallas, Houston and Longview, Buckner has broadened its base but continues its legacy of providing quality senior care. Buckner adheres to the mission “to enhance the quality of life for senior adults and their families by promoting an active, healthy Christian lifestyle while maintaining their independence and dignity.”
About The Green House Project
The Green House Project is organized by the Center for Growing and Becoming (CGB) which accredits and monitors all Green House communities’ standards. The Green House is a small intentional community for a group of elders and staff; it is intended to be a vessel for the enactment of the most positive elder hood possible. A radical departure from traditional skilled nursing homes and assisted living facilities, Green House alters facility size, interior design, staffing patterns, and methods of delivering skilled professional services.
Its primary purpose is to serve as a place where elders canreceive assistance and support with activities of daily living and clinical care, without the assistance and care becoming the focus of their existence.