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The new hot retirement spots

For the latest generation of high-energy retirees, Tennessee is among the many new Floridas. But some choose to leave a permanent address behind altogether.

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By Suzanne McGee, MSN Money

Doug 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.