Hebrew SeniorLife Blog

Tips and resources to help you navigate the joys and challenges of aging, from Boston's trusted expert in senior care.

Independent Living Options for Every Lifestyle and Budget

Hebrew SeniorLife’s approach to independent living supports active seniors as they pursue their unique interests, achieve new goals, and focus on what matters most to them every day. Our independent living communities offer you the chance for vibrant social and intellectual lives alongside the services and amenities that make daily life more carefree.

What is Independent Living?

Independent living refers to senior living communities that are primarily designed to serve the social needs of residents, as most are able to live independently without much support. Home maintenance, security, social programming, and other included senior living services vary by community.

Whether  you’re looking for a suburban residence within a larger continuing care retirement community like Orchard Cove or NewBridge on the Charles, a rental at Center Communities of Brookline or Simon C. FIreman Community, or a beachfront apartment at Jack Satter House, we offer vibrant senior living options throughout the Greater Boston area. We invite you to explore and find the right fit for you.

Independent Living within a Continuing Care Retirement Community

Orchard Cove resident, Mim Reisberg

All-inclusive Comfort in Canton

Orchard Cove

Orchard Cove is a warm, welcoming community offering independent living, enhanced living, and skilled nursing apartments on a beautiful, 38-acre pondside campus. In our resident-driven culture, we empower seniors to identify and realize their own unique goals.

Explore Orchard Cove
NewBridge on the Charles resident Murray Staub stands outside in his garden.

Upscale Luxury in Dedham

NewBridge on the Charles

NewBridge on the Charles has set a new standard in senior living, combining luxurious surroundings with exceptional amenities, first-class educational and cultural programming, and a complete continuum of care on a lush 162-acre multigenerational campus.

Explore NewBridge on the Charles

Independent Living with Supportive Services

Two older women sit together in a library at a table with books and magazines.

Premier Location. Exceptional Value.

Center Communities of Brookline

Center Communities of Brookline offers apartment living with on-site support services that promote wellness and independence. Our community is designed for seniors who want to maintain an active lifestyle in a senior-friendly urban environment.

Explore Center Communities of Brookline
A senior holds a ball above his head with the help of a physical therapist in the Simon C. Fireman Community fitness center.

An Active and Engaging Spirit in Randolph

Simon C. Fireman Community

Featuring excellent amenities and a robust menu of activities, the Simon C. Fireman Community offers studio and one-bedroom independent living apartments for low-income seniors. This stimulating environment promotes wellness, socialization, and personal fulfillment.

Explore Simon C. Fireman Community
A resident-led chorus practices singing in a brightly-lit community room.

Ocean Views in Revere

Jack Satter House

Located directly across the boulevard from historic Revere Beach, Jack Satter House offers independent living apartments for low-income seniors with beautiful ocean views, convenient access to Boston, a state-of-the-art fitness center, and engaging social, cultural, and educational activities.

Explore Jack Satter House

Get More with an All-Inclusive Lifestyle

When moving to independent living at Orchard Cove, residents pay an entrance fee similar to the cost of comparable local real estate, which is largely returned to them or their family when they move out. Some choose to get almost all their entrance fee back when they leave, and others are okay with getting back a bit less, so they pay less at the start. Our team can talk with you about what works best for your financial situation.

Additionally, residents pay a monthly fee for the all-inclusive lifestyle Orchard Cove provides, including:

  • All utilities
  • One meal a day
  • Daily programs and performances
  • Fitness center and indoor pool
  • Our award-winning Vitalize 360 wellness coaching
  • Weekly housekeeping
  • Underground climate-controlled parking
  • Home maintenance
  • Basic expanded cable
  • Wi-Fi network
  • Transportation
  • Storage

Medically-qualified residents may elect to take advantage of Orchard Cove’s LifeCare plan. By paying an increased refundable entrance fee and monthly service fee, LifeCare residents have peace of mind knowing their ongoing care needs, should they extend to our enhanced living or skilled nursing levels, will be met without unanticipated financial burden for them or their families.

Our finance director routinely provides confidential consultations to seniors who are wondering if a move to Orchard Cove may be financially feasible. To learn more about independent living costs at Orchard Cove, please contact our retirement counselors at 781-859-3088.

Securing Your Future Care

Close up of the hand of an Orchard Cove geriatrician as she counsels a patient.

You Haven’t Missed the Boat

Learn about LifeCare

The long-term care insurance market has changed over time, resulting in some unexpected challenges and dissatisfaction among policy owners. For those who haven’t purchased plans, LifeCare remains a way to ensure some financial security for your future care.

Read Our Blog

Getting to Know You

Orchard Cove is committed to ensuring that each senior who moves to our community has the best experience possible. Part of that is making sure we get to know each individual resident, in advance, through an application process that includes sharing financial and medical records.

Our sales counselors are here to walk you through each step in the process. To learn more about getting started, we invite you to call us at 781-859-3088.

When you’re ready to make NewBridge on the Charles home, our sales counselors will guide you through a process that includes a simple application that shares personal information about your interests, background, and family; submission of your medical records as well as an in-person medical assessment with a member of our medical practice; meeting with our executive director and a member of our community life team; and the disclosure of financial information and supporting documents.

For those looking to experience more of NewBridge on the Charles before applying, we are happy to arrange a lunch with current residents or for you to attend one of our many programs. 

To get started, contact our sales counselors at 781-859-3090.

With 20 different floor plans ranging from nearly 1,000 square feet to just over 2,000 square feet, there is no shortage of well-appointed apartment choices. All apartments are located in close proximity to the action, either in a wing of the Shapiro Community Center or in two adjoining buildings. And each residence features generous closets, gourmet kitchens with stainless steel appliances, granite countertops, full-size washer/dryer units, expansive windows, underground parking, and secure storage spaces. Two-bedroom units have two bathrooms; one-bedrooms have one-and-a-half. Most apartments also feature screened-in porches and many have gas fireplaces.

Apartment Styles and Sample Floor Plans

And Much More

A NewBridge on the Charles resident sits and reads a magazine in a contemporary library with ample seating and open shelving for books and periodicals.

Everything You Need

Independent Living Amenities

Independent living residents of NewBridge on the Charles have access to exclusive amenities including the Centro restaurant, a vast resident-run library, indoor pool, spa, art studio, and putting green.

Explore Amenities
An older man in an oxford shirt and navy trousers walks across the community center bridge with the NewBridge on the Charles move-in coordinator.

Let Us Take Care of It

Independent Living Resident Services

Enjoy the pleasures of luxury living—and let us take care of the little things. From our concierge to housekeeping, home maintenance, and transportation services, our team has you covered. 

Explore Resident Services
An older man is seen by a Harvard Medical School-affiliated health care provider as part of the on-site health care services offered at NewBridge on the Charles.

Harvard Medical School-Affiliated

On-Site Health Care

Residents of NewBridge on the Charles have priority access to a full continuum of on-site, Harvard Medical School-affiliated health care including primary care, in-home care, post-acute care, long-term chronic care, and hospice care.

Explore Health Care
A group of NewBridge residents enjoy coffee and conversation following a theatrical performance in Great Meadow Hall.

Every Day Offers Something New

Community Life

Living at NewBridge on the Charles means enjoying world-class arts and cultural events, high-level lifelong learning opportunities, and the friendship of fascinating neighbors.

Explore Community Life

Amenities to Fit Your Independent Lifestyle

The benefits of living at NewBridge on the Charles go well beyond the walls of your home.

When you move here, you’ll enjoy amenities just for independent living residents, as well as the NewBridge-wide amenities that tie our campus together.

Ready to learn more?
Contact our sales team at 781-859-3090.

Large open dining area with large windows NewBridge's fine dining restaurant.

Elegant Dining at Centro

In addition to the NewBridge-wide dining options, independent living residents have exclusive use of Centro, our full-service restaurant. Step into Centro and you'll be bathed in the beautiful colors and warmth of a premier restaurant that offers a stylish dining experience at every lunch and dinner. With a modern open kitchen where chefs prepare each dish to order, Centro offers a prix fixe menu that varies every day but always highlights the freshest and most flavorful cuisine.

A resident of NewBridge on the Charles works out in the spacious fitness center filled with equipment designed for geriatric exercise.

Fitness and Aquatic Center

A large fitness center provides personal health and wellness coaching, group classes and supervised exercise on equipment designed for geriatric fitness. A well-appointed locker room also connects to a spacious indoor pool with graded access, a whirlpool and sauna. 

An older man sits in a chair reading a magazine in an open sunny room with rows and rows of books and magazines behind him.

An Extensive Library

A full resident-run library near the entrance of the Shapiro Community Center serves as a social gathering point for committee meetings, book clubs, and readers of all interests.

An older couple enjoys an afternoon of canoeing on the Charles River thanks to the NewBridge on the Charles boat launch connecting the campus to the Dedham Water Trail.

Outdoor Recreation

NewBridge on the Charles is proud to provide direct access to the Charles River through our own canoe and kayak launch, part of the Dedham Water Trail. An outdoor tennis court and putting green also provide opportunities for outdoor recreation.

A NewBridge resident waters his vegetables in our raised garden beds

Exclusive Conveniences

Independent living residents at NewBridge also have exclusive access to secure underground parking, a full beauty salon and spa, community gardens, a hobby shop, a movie theater, and card room.

4,650+

book, music, and film titles in library

100+

classes, performances, and programs each month, on average

135

residents use our fitness center each week, on average
The Shapiro Community Center at NewBridge on the Charles, pictured at dusk, offers many amenities open to all NewBridge residents.

Campus-Wide Amenities

Living at NewBridge means being part of a larger campus that includes additional dining options, common spaces, natural beauty, a K-8 independent school, and a full continuum of Harvard Medical School-affiliated health care services.

Explore Campus Amenities

As an independent living resident of NewBridge on the Charles, you’ll enjoy a comprehensive array of services designed to provide peace of mind and leave you free to do more of what matters most to you.

  • Monthly dining credits for meals in Centro, Copper Beech Room, Nosh, and Treats, as well as guest meals, take-out meals, and catering.

  • Weekly housekeeping

  • Utilities including heat, air conditioning, electricity, water, basic cable television, high-speed wireless internet, sewer and trash collection, landscaping, lawn maintenance, and snow removal

  • 24-hour security staff

  • Electronic rapid response network for fire, medical, and other emergencies

  • Scheduled transportation

  • Medical appointment transportation within a five-mile radius and to Newton-Wellesley Hospital

  • Campus shuttle service

  • Fitness and aquatic centers (both with rehabilitation capabilities)

  • Concierge services

  • Business center services

  • Reserved parking

  • Cultural, social, fitness, recreation, educational, and spiritual programs

  • Vitalize 360 wellness coaching

  • Clinic wellness services and programs

Available for an Additional Fee

  • Hair salon, barbershop, and spa services

  • Private transportation

  • Additional meals once monthly credit is spent

  • Additional housekeeping

  • Personal fitness training

  • On-site catering

  • Guest house accommodations

  • Home health care*

  • Outpatient rehabilitation*

  • Clinic services*

  • On-site Harvard Medical School-affiliated medical practice*

*These services are often covered in full or in part by third-party reimbursement such as Medicare.

And Much More

A NewBridge on the Charles resident sits and reads a magazine in a contemporary library with ample seating and open shelving for books and periodicals.

Everything You Need

Independent Living Amenities

Independent living residents of NewBridge on the Charles have access to exclusive amenities including the Centro restaurant, resident-run library, indoor pool, spa, art studio, and putting green.

Explore Amenities
An older man is seen by a Harvard Medical School-affiliated health care provider as part of the on-site health care services offered at NewBridge on the Charles.

Harvard Medical School-Affiliated

On-Site Health Care

Residents of NewBridge on the Charles have priority access to a full continuum of on-site, Harvard Medical School-affiliated health care including primary care, in-home care, post-acute care, long-term chronic care, and hospice care.

Explore Health Care
A group of NewBridge residents enjoy coffee and conversation following a theatrical performance in Great Meadow Hall.

Every Day Offers Something New

Community Life

Living at NewBridge on the Charles means you’ll be able to enjoy your choice of world-class arts and cultural events, high-level lifelong learning opportunities, as well as the friendship of fascinating neighbors.

Explore Community Life

When moving to independent living at NewBridge on the Charles, residents pay an entrance fee similar to the cost of a comparable home in the area, which is then 90% refundable to them or their estate when leaving the community.

Additionally, residents pay a monthly fee that covers the services and amenities that NewBridge on the Charles provides, including:

  • Monthly dining credits for meals in Centro, Copper Beech Room, Nosh, as well as guest meals, take-out meals, and catering
  • Weekly housekeeping
  • Utilities including heat, air conditioning, electricity, water, basic cable television, high-speed wireless internet, sewer and trash collection, landscaping, lawn maintenance, and snow removal
  • 24-hour security staff
  • Electronic rapid response network for fire, medical, and other emergencies
  • Scheduled transportation
  • Medical appointment transportation within a five-mile radius and to Newton-Wellesley Hospital
  • Campus shuttle service
  • Fitness and aquatic centers (both with rehabilitation capabilities) 
  • Concierge services
  • Business center services
  • Reserved parking
  • Cultural, social, fitness, recreation, educational, and spiritual programs
  • Vitalize 360 wellness coaching
  • Clinic wellness services and programs

Medically-qualified residents may elect to take advantage of the NewBridge on the Charles Modified Life Care Plan. By paying an increased entrance fee, residents with the Modified Life Care Plan have peace of mind knowing their ongoing care costs, should they move to assisted living or long-term chronic care at NewBridge, will be significantly reduced.

Our finance director routinely provides confidential consultations to potential residents who are wondering if a move to NewBridge on the Charles may be financially feasible. To learn more about independent living costs at NewBridge on the Charles, please contact our retirement counselors at 781-859-3090.

The Best of City Living — within a Supportive Community

An extensive menu of programs and services. A central location near the bustling Brookline hubs of Coolidge Corner and Washington Square. With a focus on promoting activity and wellness, our communities are designed for active seniors who wish to maintain an independent lifestyle. An extensive menu of programs and activities offers residents a world of choices. Center Communities of Brookline offers the best in urban living.

The Marilyn and André Danesh Family Residences at 100 Centre Street

  • Located in Coolidge Corner, adjacent to the Brookline Senior Center
  • Large community room for lectures, music, performances, and social gatherings
  • Apartments with spectacular views of Boston
  • Skyline Café with floor to ceiling windows
  • Laundry on each floor
  • On-site parking available

The Diane and Mark Goldman Family Residences at 1550 Beacon Street

  • Located between Coolidge Corner and Washington Square
  • Large community room for lectures, music, performances, and social gatherings
  • Outside patio with spectacular treetop view
  • State-of-the-art fitness center
  • On-site parking available
  • Newly renovated common areas and hallway

Life at CCB

Two Center Communities of Brookline women eating and laughing together

Amenities

At Center Communities of Brookline, you have access to a full range of amenities including our Skyline Café, fitness center, programming spaces, and beauty salon.

Explore Amenities
Two Center Communities of Brookline residents return from a shopping trip in nearby Coolidge Corner

Resident Services

Every day at Center Communities of Brookline offers the support and stimulation that make life meaningful. From lifelong learning opportunities, to transportation and wellness programming, Center Communities is here for you.

Explore Resident Services

What People are saying about Hebrew SeniorLife

  • "Your team is outstanding. Every member has demonstrated interest to fulfill any request with the highest standards and promptness. The best part of my day is when I arrive at 100 Centre Street feeling the reassurance of being at home. Thank you for your impeccable teamwork."

    Resident

Initiative to Promote a Culture of Mobility in Hospitals Yields Encouraging Results

Hospitals Nationwide Participate in Effort to Improve Outcomes for Older Hospitalized Patients

BOSTON – A paper published today in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society reported results of an initiative designed to enhance implementation of hospital mobility programs aimed at improving quality of care and outcomes for older patients. Sharon K. Inouye, M.D., M.P.H., Director of the Aging Brain Center in the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew SeniorLife, headed the effort and is the paper’s senior author, and her mentee, Songprod Jonathan Lorgunpai, M.D., Division of Geriatric Medicine, Mount Auburn Hospital, is the paper’s lead author. 

Research shows that keeping older hospitalized patients confined to their beds often does more harm than good. Immobility contributes to poor patient outcomes, including increased risk of injurious falls, delirium, aspiration pneumonia, pressure ulcers, functional decline, prolonged length of stay, institutionalization, readmissions, increased healthcare costs, and mortality. Despite this reality, older adults are largely immobilized throughout their hospital stay. According to estimates in 2009 and 2013, patients spent more than 95 percent of their time in a bed or chair.

Protocols in place to prevent falls are a driving force behind this statistic. In 2008, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services enacted new payment provisions that would no longer reimburse hospitals for diagnosis-related groups resulting from hospital-acquired conditions, including falls with injury. As an unintended consequence, many hospitals routinely use bed and chair alarms that discourage mobility as part of their fall prevention programs, despite large randomized clinical trials that have clearly demonstrated bed and chair alarms are ineffective at reducing falls.

As part of a 2016–2017 Health and Aging Policy Fellowship, Dr. Inouye worked with the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) to develop a new care delivery model designed to promote quality improvement related to mobility in hospitals participating in CMMI’s bundled payment programs. The overarching goal of the initiative was to improve mobility and decrease use of bed and chair alarms with hospitalized older adults. To achieve this goal, Dr. Inouye and her team developed a Mobility Action Group (MACT) Change Package that provides a conceptual framework, roadmap, and step-by-step guide to help hospital mobility teams set and meet their mobilization goals. 

The MACT Change Package provided more than 40 participating hospitals of varying sizes across the United States with an innovative framework of peer support, expert faculty, and resources to create a successful culture of mobility in the care of hospitalized older adults.

“The Change Package was an essential tool and starting point for each hospital, while the peer support and assistance they received through the group meetings proved to be another key factor in their success,” said Dr. Inouye. 

Results indicate that successful implementation of mobility programs was achieved at most (76 percent) participating sites in medical, surgical, and intensive care units, with 43 percent of mobility programs fully implemented and an additional 33 percent partially implemented by the end of the active initiative. Most (54 percent) reported a high likelihood that their mobility program would continue long-term. There was a more than twofold increase in the proportion of patients who received at least three walks per day and a 1.8-fold reduction in the use of bed or chair alarms across sites.

“I’m greatly encouraged by the results of this effort,” said Dr. Lorgunpai, who is also an Instructor in Medicine at Harvard Medical School. “While additional study is needed to determine if this approach can improve patient outcomes such as decreased falls, functional decline, and readmissions, this initiative demonstrates that emphasizing system-wide change through a flexible approach can catalyze a culture of mobility in hospitals and improve care of older adults.”

Additional co-authors include:

  • Bruce Finke, M.D., Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services, Baltimore; 
  • Isaac Burrows, M.P.H., Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services, Baltimore; Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company, Bloomfield, Conn.; 
  • Cynthia J. Brown, M.D., M.P.H., Division of Gerontology, Geriatrics, and Palliative Care, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Ala; Birmingham/Atlanta Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Care Center, Veterans Affairs; 
  • Fred H. Rubin, M.D., Division of Geriatric Medicine, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Shadyside, Pittsburgh, Penn.;
  • Heidi R. Wierman, M.D., Division of Geriatric Medicine, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine; Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Mass.; 
  • Susan J. Heisey, M.S.W., M.P.H., Aging Brain Center, Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research, Hebrew SeniorLife, Boston, Mass.;  Inova Health System, Falls Church, Va.; 
  • Sarah Gartaganis, LIC.S.W., M.P.H., Aging Brain Center, Marcus Institute, Hebrew SeniorLife, Boston, Mass.; 
  • Shari M. Ling, M.D., Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services, Baltimore; 
  • Matthew Press, M.D., M.Sc., University of Pennsylvania Health System, Philadelphia, Penn. 

This work was supported in part by the Health and Aging Policy Fellowship, and by technical support from the Hospital Elder Life Program. Dr. Inouye’s time was supported in part by grants no. R24AG054259 (SKI), K07AG041835 (SKI) from the National Institute on Aging, and by the Milton and Shirley F. Levy Family Chair at Hebrew SeniorLife/Harvard Medical School.

About the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research
Scientists at the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute seek to transform the human experience of aging by conducting research that will ensure a life of health, dignity, and productivity into advanced age. The Marcus Institute carries out rigorous studies that discover the mechanisms of age-related disease and disability; lead to the prevention, treatment, and cure of disease; advance the standard of care for older people; and inform public decision-making. For further information on the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew SeniorLife, please visit https://www.marcusinstituteforaging.org/.

About Hebrew SeniorLife
Hebrew SeniorLife, an affiliate of Harvard Medical School, is a national senior services leader uniquely dedicated to rethinking, researching, and redefining the possibilities of aging. Based in Boston, the nonprofit organization has provided communities and health care for seniors, research into aging, and education for geriatric care providers since 1903. For more information about Hebrew SeniorLife, visit http://www.hebrewseniorlife.org and our blog, or follow us on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn