Real Estate
Sep 2022 | By Kristian Partington
Since 1953, the Schlegel Family’s calling to offer a true sense of home and belonging for older adults has grown in waves, fuelled by their passion and commitment to learn from the residents they serve and the team members and partners who bring their vision to life.
Their Long-Term Care and Retirement Villages thrive because the family culture has only grown stronger over the course of three generations. As a mission-driven, family organization, Schlegel Villages believes every person connected to Village life has something important to offer and the value of each contribution can never be overstated.
The family strives to “provide holistic health care in a home environment, located within an internal neighbourhood design that promotes a caring community, with emphasis on optimal health and life purpose for each resident.” To understand how this mission thrives in the 21st Century, however, one must look back to the foundations that Wilfred and Emma Schlegel and Max and Florence Becker laid for their children and grandchildren.
These were humble, hardworking people who believed in the power of community. With Emma at his side, Wilfred would excel as a Mennonite pastor, a farmer and land steward. He cared for young and old alike, purchasing the “Egerton Private Hospital” in London in 1953, which was effectively a nursing home for up to 30 residents. Wilfred’s heart was always open to helping others in need and the nursing home where his son Ron would often help support residents was an extension of that mission to serve others.
The Beckers harboured a similar sense of community and when Ron married their daughter, Barb, their influence helped further his quest to enhance life for his neighbours around him.
In the early 1990s when Ron Schlegel opened his first long-term care Village in Kitchener, he envisioned a community hub inviting neighbours from all around to take advantage of the different amenities available. It would be a long-term care community like no other, eventually linking to a retirement home serving anyone of any ability, from fully independent seniors to people with complex care needs, memory loss and dementia.
Some 30 years and 19 Villages later, this vision of a continuum-of-care continues to expand into new communities. The Village concept was always meant to create a living space for seniors that feels like small town Ontario, in many ways like Ron experienced growing up in the woods and fields surrounding Ailsa Craig outside of London.
Success is achieved when the amenities available at the Village connect people outside the walls with what’s available to them inside. The Villages become seniors’ centres when those living at home can benefit from coming to the Village for services and programs, and they are centres of education where future caregivers inside Living Classrooms learn from hands-on experience alongside team members and residents.