A house in Everett.
Six people. One family.
About our licensed adult family home in Everett, Washington, senior care built around six residents, not floor charts.
We run a small licensed adult family home in Everett. Six residents, round-the-clock caregivers, one house. No corporate owner, no waiting-list algorithm, no floor-chart rotations.
What we believe, and how it shapes every day.
Six residents. Round-the-clock caregivers. Always.
Washington State licenses us for up to six residents. We keep it at six on purpose. Every resident has a private or semi-private room, and trained caregivers are awake and on shift day or night. No phone trees. No call buttons going unanswered.
That ratio is the whole point. It's how a caregiver notices your mother hasn't eaten her breakfast, not just that her vitals are within range.
A real home, not a facility floor plan.
Meals are cooked in the kitchen you can see from the living room. Laundry smells like the detergent your family uses. The TV is on because someone wanted to watch the news, not because it's on a schedule.
Aging at home is the gold standard. When that isn't possible, our answer is the closest substitute: somebody else's home, run the way yours would be.
A new chapter, built on a timeless idea.
The house opens
We bought the house, got licensed by Washington DSHS, and welcomed our first residents. Six residents on purpose. A covered ramp, zero-threshold showers, wide doorways, and a fenced backyard, the home built for the people who live in it.
What the first residents taught us
The policy manual was right on paper, wrong in the house. We rewrote meal times, moved a handrail, changed the overnight shift handoff, added a second pharmacy courier day. Six residents means six opinions on dinner. Good. We listened.
Where we are now
Six residents. Round-the-clock caregivers. A pharmacy partnership that packs every resident's meds in daily blister trays, and overnight motion sensors so no one gets woken up for a vitals check they don't need. Same house. Same people. Same rules.
Not a facility. A house you'd actually want to live in.
We chose a single-story, light-filled home in a quiet Everett neighborhood. Wheelchair-accessible from the curb, surrounded by gardens, with shared spaces that feel like family, not a lobby.
Shared living room
Where residents gather, where families visit, where meals linger. Open-plan, south-facing light, and seating that invites conversation instead of isolation.
Step-free entry
A covered ramp from the driveway, wide doorways throughout, and zero-threshold bathrooms mean residents move through their home with confidence, not caution.
Private garden
A fully fenced backyard with mature trees, a paved path for walks, and a bench in the shade. Fresh air is a daily option, not a scheduled event.
Begin the next chapter with confidence.
Experience a care environment shaped by compassion, safety, and quiet intention. Let us show you how we make our house a home.