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When Aaron Kissel moved to Montclair from Washington, D.C., with his family four years ago for a new job, his retired in-laws rented an apartment nearby.
His in-laws, both now 86, are still active. But Kissel says the time that he and his wife, Meg Menzel, spend helping them manage their medical needs keeps rising.
So when Montclair passed an ordinance to allow accessory dwelling units — small homes or apartments on the same lot as a single-family house — Kissel and his wife decided to convert their detached garage into a 1,100-square-foot residence.
Once the renovation is completed, his in-laws will be able to live there — with Kissel, his wife and their three kids just 90 feet away.
“You don’t know when health will change the equation, so we wanted to get it done as quickly as we could,” says Kissel, 50, CEO of a business services company. “Every year counts.”
To look over sample designs of ADUs, Kissel contacted Ann Lippel, executive vice president of Montclair Gateway to Aging in Place. The nonprofit received a $12,266 AARP Community Challenge grant in 2023 for a competition that created free designs for homeowners for building ADUs, and documentation for obtaining planning board approval.
That project has spurred other efforts beyond Montclair. Among the Community Challenge grant recipients in 2025, New Jersey Advocates for Aging Well received $15,000 for a design competition that also focuses on ADUs, as well as affordable, age-friendly housing. Winning designs will be shared across the state to encourage development.
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“Knowing what Ann [Lippel] had done in Montclair, we just saw this as a great opportunity to bring awareness of the potential for housing ... statewide,” says Cathy Rowe, 58, NJAAW executive director of advocacy.
The national AARP Community Challenge grant program aims to make communities more livable for all ages by improving public spaces, housing and safety, among other goals. This year, AARP awarded 383 grants for quick-action projects, totaling $4.2 million.
“The projects jump-start big ideas for meaningful improvements to communities,” says Sarah Torres, director of community outreach and volunteer engagement at AARP New Jersey.
PROJECTS HELP OLDER RESIDENTS
Since the grant program began in 2017, New Jersey groups have received 47 grants totaling $586,936. “Every year we get more and more applications coming through by word of mouth,” Torres says.
The grant to Rowe’s group is one of 11, totaling $110,600, that AARP awarded in New Jersey this year, with amounts ranging from $2,500 to $25,000. Among the recipients:
“The hope, the dream, is they get replicated and expanded, too,” says Torres of this year’s projects.
To learn more about the annual program and grant applications, go to aarp.org/communitychallenge.
Drew Jubera spent 21 years as a reporter at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He has written for the Bulletin since 2009.
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