By Suzanne McGee, MSN MoneyDoug and Kate Judd were ready to retire. The only question that remained to be decided was where to go.
"We
definitely wanted a friendlier climate," says Doug, a former
machine-tool-company employee, who like his wife had grown up in
Milwaukee and spent his life nearby. Fans of outdoor activities, the
couple wanted to spend more time hiking, canoeing and camping.
Florida,
the clichéd retirement destination, simply didn't appeal. "The
lifestyle there seemed a bit more sedentary, involving a lot of
shopping," Kate says. "I don't think we're retirement community
material."
Where's my dream retirement?
After
looking at alternatives such as San Diego, they moved a year ago to a
house near the top of Missionary Ridge, overlooking Chattanooga, Tenn.
"This has so much of what we were looking for," Kate says. "It's an
economical place to live, (and) we can be on a hiking trail in
minutes." Chattanooga hasn't knocked Florida off its perch as the most
favored retirement destination. Nearly 20% of Americans over 60
contemplating an interstate move still eventually head to the Sunshine
State, according to census data monitored by the Center for Creative
Retirement at the University of North Carolina in Asheville. But that's
down from 26.2% back in 1980.
And as baby boomers like the
Judds swell the ranks of retirees, the stereotypically sedate
retirement lifestyle -- revolving around golf, tennis and lots of
sunshine -- is likely to slump still further, making way for a new set
of retirement hot spots.
"Boomers are looking for something
different in retirement, and that extends to where and how they live,"
argues Nanette Overly, a co-chairwoman of Ohio's 50+ Housing Council,
which studies housing-related decisions made by older Americans. "They
want amenities, yes, but not the same ones as their parents and
grandparents," adds Overly, who is also the vice president of sales and
marketing for Epcon Communities, a property management company in
Dublin, Ohio.
Tell us: Where would your "dream" retirement be?
So
goodbye, Florida, and hello, Chattanooga. This midsize city -- where
the amenities include hiking and biking trails, an aquarium and a
thriving local arts scene -- is one of the leaders in a growing cluster
of communities trying to woo baby-boomer retirees to less-traditional
destinations for their retirements. Among the others: Asheville, N.C.;
Austin, Texas; and the college towns of western Massachusetts.
Booming Chattanooga
Choose Chattanooga, a heavily promoted program aimed squarely at this group, is reaping rewards: J. Ed.
Marston,
the head of marketing for the city's Chamber of Commerce, now fields
1,200 to 1,400 inquiries a month from boomers interested in moving to
Chattanooga. That's up from 80 to 100 before the program was launched
18 months ago.
Census data already show that Chattanooga, and
Tennessee as a whole, are capturing an above-average share of those
Americans who move from one state to another.
"We are finding boomers want to be in a real, live, diverse community that offers a lot to do," Marston says.
Many
boomer retirees still crave warmth and good weather, although they may
seek it out in south-of-the-border spots such as San Miguel de Allende,
Mexico, where a large expatriate community has sprung up, or similar
communities in Panama and Costa Rica.
But regularly, sunshine and
golf simply aren't enough. "Preferred destinations are about more than
warm weather and rock-bottom taxes," says Sri Reddy, the head of
retirement income strategies at ING, an investment management company
that offers financial planning advice to clients. "Survey after survey
shows that what boomers want from a retirement lifestyle is a place
where they can pursue their own specific interests, however esoteric,
and be among like-minded people."
'I feel like I belong.'
Reddy's
father retired after working 30 years as a doctor and is now taking
classes to become a Web designer, she says, adding that her dad
wouldn't have dreamed of moving anyplace that lacked high-level
educational opportunities.
Hampshire College is one of many
colleges trying to capitalize on this. In the Pioneer Valley, in
western Massachusetts, the college hired Boston's Beacon Communities to
build what the school is billing as a "lifelong learning community"
aimed at boomers and tied to the college. The ground hasn't been broken
yet at the development, called Veridian Village, but some 20
individuals or couples have put down deposits for one of its town
houses and apartments.
"These are for people who would rather
attend college classes at Hampshire or one of the four other colleges
nearby -- Smith, Amherst, Mount Holyoke or the University of
Massachusetts -- than play golf," says Pam Goodman, the president of
Beacon Communities. "Boomers have a much wider range of interests than
their predecessors, and they're not going to stick to any single
pattern, or destination, when they retire."
Retirees looking for new destinations have to answer plenty of questions before they make a decision.
Should
they stay near home or venture to another country? Health care is
important, but how do they balance access to hospitals with other
amenities?
'Think through the practical elements'
"This
may end up as our transitional or first retirement destination," says
Brad Goersch, who moved to St. Croix, in the U.S. Virgin Islands, with
his wife, Donna.
In addition to snorkeling and scuba diving,
Brad oversees their ham radio rental operation while Donna teaches
horseback riding. "We may move back to the mainland if we need to be
close to a hospital after we get older," he says.
Ron Manheimer
at the Center for Creative Retirement offers workshops aimed at helping
retirees decide how to weigh multiple factors in their decision. "A lot
of the people who come to our programs are already thinking that
Asheville would be a great place to retire to," he says. Manheimer
urges them not to decide too hastily.
"You need to do a test run," he explains. "If you like Asheville in February, well, that's a good indicator!"
Some
boomers are opting not to be pinned to one place at all. After spending
27 years with Johnson & Johnson as an information technology
executive, Betty Robinson retired at the end of 2006 and left her New
Jersey home -- for a 48-foot trawler yacht.
"Learning about
navigation, about boat maintenance, re-energized me," says Robinson,
57. So far she has taken the yacht, LiLy, on one long-haul trip from
Annapolis, Md., to Florida, where she spent a winter hopping from one
marina to another.
"I no longer have a land base at all, and
that kind of amazes my more conventional friends," says Robinson,
laughing. "But I'm eliminating the whole idea of being tied to a single
place. My retirement life is going to be a big adventure."
Choosing is the hardest part
Published June 12, 2008