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Titirangi is a suburb of West Auckland in the Waitākere Ranges local board area of the city of Auckland in northern New Zealand. It is an affluent, residential suburb located 13 km (8.1 mi) to the southwest of the Auckland city centre, at the southern end of the Waitākere Ranges. [3]
Some Kind of Heaven is a 2020 American documentary film about The Villages, Florida, the world's largest retirement community.Marking the directorial feature debut of Lance Oppenheim, the film is a stylized portrait of four residents living within The Villages, struggling to find happiness and meaning in life's final chapters.
Lopdell House is a category I historic building in Titirangi, Auckland.It was first opened as Hotel Titirangi in 1930. In 1942 it was bought by the Ministry of Education and became a school for the deaf, and then a teacher's residential centre named Lopdell House.
In the early 20th century, Kaurilands was various described as a part of Titirangi or Waikumete (modern Glen Eden). During the 1920s and 1930s, the area was the site of a large daffodil farm. [ 9 ] Kaurilands School was opened in 1954, [ 10 ] and the area's first post office was built on Withers Road in 1964.
Te Uru Waitākere Contemporary Gallery (commonly known as Te Uru, formerly known as Lopdell House Gallery) is a contemporary art gallery located in Titirangi, Auckland. The gallery, which serves the West Auckland region, was originally opened within Lopdell House in 1986.
It owns 14 villages across Britain with 1,609 residents. Eight contain on-site care homes with a total of about 300 residents. In 2014/5 the firm had sales of £35 million and paid its six directors a total of £498,000. In November 2016 it announced its intention to open seven more villages with a gross value of £200 million by 2021.
Woodlands Park is a suburb on the western outskirts of West Auckland, New Zealand.Nestled in the Waitākere Ranges, Woodlands Park lies in a valley, bush clad hills separating it from Titirangi (to the north east), Parau and Huia (to the south east) and Laingholm (to the south).
Anglican Retirement Villages, Diocese of Sydney (ARV) was a not-for-profit public benevolent institution formed in 1959. [1] This inception date places ARV as one of the founding entities of the social service now referred to as retirement or seniors living.