About Serenity House

Serenity House was designed for people who still want to enjoy their days, not just be taken care of.

Think of it less like a facility and more like a beautifully run home — one where meals are something to look forward to, days have variety, and support is available when needed, without taking over life.

This is assisted living reimagined as everyday living with help built in.

Take A Tour

Mornings are unhurried.

Some residents start the day with light stretching by the lake across the street, coffee in hand, sunlight coming up over the water. Others ease into the morning with breakfast, conversation, and the paper at the kitchen table.

What Life Looks Like Here

There’s no buzzer. No overhead announcements. No rigid schedule forcing everyone into the same rhythm.

Life unfolds naturally.

Meals People Actually Talk About

Food is a centerpiece here — not an afterthought.

Lunch might mean a garden walk followed by a fresh, thoughtfully prepared meal. Afternoons sometimes include art and wine, with conversation lingering long after the glasses are empty. Dinners are warm, social, and relaxed — the kind of meals that feel familiar and comforting, but still elevated.

Menus change. Preferences are known. Dietary needs are respected without making food feel clinical.

Meals are meant to be enjoyed, not endured.

Serenity House doesn’t run on bingo boards or time-killing activities.

Instead, days include things people already enjoy:

  • Creative projects and hands-on activities

  • Gardening and outdoor time

  • Local outings, lunches, and walks

  • Movement that feels good, not obligatory

  • Quiet afternoons when rest feels right

Some days are social. Some days are calm. Both are valued.

Residents aren’t entertained — they’re living.

Days With Variety, Not Fillers

Take A Tour
Support That’s There Without Being Everywhere

Help is always available, but it doesn’t dominate the experience.

Assistance with daily activities, medications, and personal care is woven into the day quietly and respectfully. Residents receive what they need, when they need it, without feeling managed or watched.

Because Serenity House is intentionally small, care feels personal. Staff know routines, preferences, and personalities — not just charts.

This allows residents to keep their dignity, independence, and sense of self.

Families often say the same thing after walking through Serenity House:

“This feels like somewhere I’d want to spend time.”

It feels calm.
It feels warm.
It feels intentional — not institutional.

There’s a sense that life is still being lived here, just with more support and fewer worries.

That’s the difference.

Why Families Feel Relief When They Visit

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