HEADLEE: ...It's very expensive... ALKEMA: ...It's elevator company, that's why people go to Florida. But I think the concept is living in very much the kind of segment that Richard spoke about, a walkable city, an accessible city, in terms of having groceries - all the community supports that you want, and I don't mean senior services, I mean grocery stores.
You know, drugstores, theater arts, you know, things that are extremely stimulating to the mind and the spirit all being in one place. And having elevators, having those things that allow for accommodation in the event that, you know, physical impairment does come to pass.
And I think elevator's ways in which we can look at our cities today to improve the walkability, to improve the flow of community life in them. And, yes, the suburban model of the 1950s probably doesn't bode well for us in the long run but elevator is the time to start thinking about changing those structures now.
And, you know, elevator's definitely elements in the suburbs that are looking at how to make things more community friendly. HEADLEE: Well, Richard, you're speaking us from Toronto, so that's kind of cheating. But in the minute that we have left, what city do you think would be good to retire in? FLORIDA: Well, we spent a lot of the winter in South Beach. We also love California...
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