Design Decisions That Drive Revenue: Why Senior Living Design Is Becoming a Competitive Advantage
June 1, 2026
1:33 pm
In senior living, design has traditionally been viewed through the lens of aesthetics.
Does the community feel updated? Does it compete visually with newer properties? Does it create a strong first impression during tours?
Those things still matter. But today's operators are recognizing something much bigger:
Design directly impacts occupancy, resident satisfaction, staff efficiency, safety outcomes, and long-term financial performance.
At the 2026 Senior Living Executive Conference, industry leaders Stuart Scott of Tower Partners, Jackie Patterson of Lenhardt Rodgers Architecture + Interiors, and Summer Blizzard of Phoenix Senior Living explored how design decisions can influence both operational success and revenue performance.
Their message was clear: the communities leading the future are designing for more than appearance alone.
First Impressions Still Matter
Families often begin forming opinions within moments of entering a community.
Curb appeal, lighting, finishes, entry experience, and tour flow all influence whether a space feels welcoming, safe, and worth the rate being charged.
But successful communities are designing for two audiences at once:
- The resident
- The family decision-maker
Residents want comfort, familiarity, and dignity. Families want reassurance that the environment feels supportive, safe, and professionally operated.
Communities that communicate both effectively often see stronger conversion rates and faster lease-up.
Repositioning Projects Don't Always Require Major Renovations
One of the biggest takeaways from the session was practicality.
Not every repositioning project requires a complete overhaul.
In many cases, updates to lighting, flooring, paint, artwork, and finishes can create an immediate perception shift for residents and families.
At the same time, operators were encouraged to focus on fixing operational friction that impacts daily life for residents and staff.
That includes:
- Poor layouts
- Visibility challenges
- Inefficient workflows
- Problematic flooring transitions
- Navigation issues
The strongest projects balance appearance with functionality.
Because beautiful spaces that frustrate staff or create resident challenges rarely perform well long-term.
Safety Is Becoming a Market Differentiator
One of the most important conversations during the presentation centered around safety.
Families increasingly expect senior living environments to actively support safer mobility and reduce injury risk.
That reality is pushing operators to think differently about environmental design.
The session highlighted several best practices, including:
- Smooth, flush flooring transitions
- Barrier-free shower entries
- Bright, even lighting
- Reduced glare
- Improved visual contrast
- Flooring systems designed to help mitigate fall-related injuries
These decisions influence far more than aesthetics.
They impact:
- Family confidence
- Resident experience
- Staff efficiency
- ER visits and hospital transfers
- Operational stability
- Long-term asset value
Passive Protection Is Changing the Conversation
The presentation also explored the growing role of passive safety solutions built directly into the environment.
Unlike reactive interventions that rely on alarms or staff response times, passive solutions continuously support resident safety without disrupting independence.
That includes fall protection underlayments like Viconic Fall Defense, which are installed beneath finished flooring to help reduce injury severity when falls occur.
This reflects a broader shift happening across senior living.
Not every fall can — or should — be prevented if it comes at the expense of mobility, autonomy, and quality of life.
Instead, more communities are asking:
How do we better protect residents when falls happen?
That question is changing how operators think about flooring, lighting, bathrooms, and overall environmental support.
The Future of Senior Living Design Is Performance-Driven
Senior living design is evolving beyond appearance alone. The communities leading the future will not simply look better. They will function better.
They will support:
- Safer mobility
- Better operational efficiency
- Stronger resident engagement
- Improved staff workflows
- Changing acuity needs
- Greater family confidence
Because ultimately, the most valuable environments are not defined solely by how they look.
They are defined by how well they perform — for residents, families, staff, and operators alike.
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