Living Platform - CLOSED offered a mix of healthcare services and a place to live, but the community isn't open anymore, so none of the options or special programs are active. People who lived there could get help with daily activities, meal prep, medication, and personal care, and if they needed memory care, there were areas set up with memory support and activity programs for folks with dementia, plus skilled nursing care that worked round the clock for needs like rehab and wounds, though all that's shut down now. Living Platform had some specialized features they called different names for the way they ran care and services, but those unique things and their online and telehealth appointments are gone now since the facility closed.
The community had choices for living, like semi-private rooms, studios, and one-bedroom places, and some homes were small, called Board and Care Homes, for just a handful of residents needing daily help. Seniors aging in place could stay in continuing care communities, so they didn't have to move as their needs changed, and those who could live mostly on their own had help with chores, outings, and meals, and got to use social spaces and planned activities, but now it's all shut down. For folks over 45, especially those physically independent, there was affordable housing, a fully furnished home with laundry onsite, and all utilities paid, even WiFi and phone, and these places focused on being safe, clean, and supportive, but none of that's running now.
Living Platform was known for supporting mental health, with case managers, end-of-life care, and virtual care appointments, but those parts are closed too. There were also short-term housing options and sober living arrangements, like Oxford Houses, set up as democratically run, drug-free homes with peer support, meetings, and drug testing, meant for recovery and helping people after hard times, but these programs and their occupancy rules don't exist anymore since the facility shut down. They took different ways to pay like SSI, SSDI, vouchers, and private pay, and gave support with daily life, job skills, and housing, focusing on being all-inclusive. Living Platform also had another side that wasn't about care but about planning, zoning, and helping developers or residents with zoning reports, zoning map extracts, or building codes about what could be built or lived in each area, even offering APIs and tools for looking up all kinds of zoning information, but none of those zoning services are available anymore since the whole place is closed.