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Dementia village planned in Wisconsin to house 65 residents
Summary
Agrace plans a $40 million dementia village on its Madison campus to house up to 65 people with memory loss, modeled on the Netherlands' Hogeweyk community and expected to open in September 2027.
Content
Agrace, a Wisconsin hospice care organisation, has announced plans to build what it describes as America's first "dementia village" on its Madison campus. The $40 million project is intended to open in September 2027 and to house up to 65 people with memory loss conditions. The design follows the Hogeweyk model from the Netherlands and aims to offer household-style living with on-site medical support. Agrace says the community is intended to feel less like an institution and more like a small town.
Key facts:
- Agrace announced a $40 million dementia village on its Madison campus to house up to 65 residents.
- The design is based on the Hogeweyk model, organised into households of about eight with on-site medical staff and household-style spaces.
- The project includes a $7 million philanthropic gift and an endowment intended to support a sliding fee scale; residency pricing has not been finalised.
- The village is expected to open in September 2027; Agrace reports more than 100 people have registered for notifications and day-visitor places will be offered.
Summary:
The project is a U.S. adaptation of a community-style memory care model that has influenced services elsewhere and is intended to provide familiar daily routines in household settings. Agrace plans to open the village in September 2027, and several operational and cost details remain to be announced. Undetermined at this time
