La Belle Maison sat quietly in a Beaverton neighborhood at 7450 SW Alpine Dr, and you'd notice right away it was a small adult family home, offering just five licensed beds, which gave it a calm, close feeling where folks got to know each other by name and caregivers like Erica Heatherly or Allison really focused on personalized care. The surroundings felt home-like, with amenities meant for comfort, letting people keep their cats or dogs, and the short-term respite stays allowed families a break or time for recovery when they needed it. The facility specialized in Level 3 Care, so it welcomed people with high care needs, like those living with Parkinson's, dementia, Alzheimer's disease, or even adults with autism, and memory care services played a big part in the services offered, along with skilled nursing, hospice care, home care, and home health support, all meant to help both elderly and adults who needed daily assistance. The monthly price for a private room was $3,000, which was usually lower than average for the area, and La Belle Maison only accepted private pay.
Living near parks, doctors, pharmacies, restaurants, and places to worship made everyday outings pretty easy, and folks could also get help with transportation, making sure they stayed part of the wider community, so it never felt cut off. The staff paid attention to safety, using home security, ID theft protection, medication dispensers, and home safety guides so residents could stay safe and comfortable as they aged, and the facility even offered specialized options to support aging in place like caregiver support, medical alert systems, and referral services for families figuring out the next steps. If you checked the website at www.labellemaisonresidential.com, you'd find more details about available care, though there wasn't any direct information about specific programs or unique staff names inside La Belle Maison itself, since there were many homes and providers connected through the Welcome Home Community-places with names like Jovial Care Home, Harmony Home, and Stay A While Care Home, some even named after their caregivers. Technology played its part here, too, as residents could get senior-friendly internet, cable, cell phones, and plans made for their needs, like Jitterbug and Consumer Cellular, and extra help was available with hearing aids and health resources to make day-to-day life easier.
People living at La Belle Maison could choose independent or assisted living, or join group activities and shared meals-plus there was help for retirement planning, insurance, estate questions, and Social Security matters, and some resources for fun like senior activities, travel, and housing guides. No matter the care needs-whether it was companion care, memory care, independent or assisted living, or even skilled nursing-La Belle Maison tried to fill the gaps, welcoming people into a quiet setting with compassionate caregivers and a simple, honest approach to daily life. According to available information, though, this facility is now permanently closed.