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A downtown Toronto long-term care home is rebuilding with a new design that considers lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, going beyond the provinceโs standards โ but some say those standards are out of date.ย
Right down to the placement of garbage cans, the new design of the Rekai Centreโs Cherry Place aims to prevent the spread of viruses and prioritize residentsโ emotional and social needs, according to the centreโs CEO, Sue Graham-Nutter.
โWe never wanted our residents to go through this ever again,โ she said.ย
Traditional long-term care homes saw over three times as many COVID-19 deaths and twice as many cases in 2020 than small care homes, according to data from a 2025 study by the National Institute on Aging (NIA).
Many of the planned updates at the 13-storey facility on Cherry Street were brainstormed during the pandemic as shortfalls were brought to light, said Graham-Nutter.
โI would go into the stairwell, in my full PPE, and I would text [the architect] with, โWe need to think about this, we need to think about that,โ because I didn’t want to forget the minor details,โ she said.ย
The redesigned facility will have infection control zones with sealed doors, improved oxygen access and 348 beds.ย
Ontario requires facilities to have a maximum of two residents per room and patients must be divided into self-contained cohorts of 32 people maximum, called โresident home areas,โ according to the latest Ontario long-term care home design manual from 2015.
The changes made by the Rekai Centre are a good start, according to Dr. Samir Sinha, a geriatrician, clinician scientist and the director of health Policy Research at NIA.
But Ontario’s standards for long-term care homes are falling behind the latest best-practice research, he said.

โIf you think about palliative care hospices, if you think about group homes for younger people โฆ we often don’t have them living in large institutional settings,” Sinha said. โSo why is it that in North America we only do this with frail, older people?โ
Sinha said long-term care should be moving towards a โsmall care homesโ model of 10 to 12 people, each with their own private bedroom and bathroom. Larger buildings can be broken up into multiple 12-person households and still follow the model, he said.
Smaller cohorts, more privacy
Some resident home areas at Cherry Place are being built for 14 or 18 beds for a more home-like feel, said project architect Dustin Hooper with the firm Montgomery Sisam.
It will also have suites for families to stay while visiting a loved one and multiple terraces with green spaces sandboxes, according to the projectโs architect, said Hooper.
โA really important aspect of long-term care is providing those communal outdoor spaces where residents can gather with other residents, but also with loved ones when they come to visit,โ said Hooper.

Residents will each have their own bedroom, Graham-Nutter said, and their own bathroom, where possible, to reduce the spread of disease in the event of an outbreak.ย
Graham-Nutter said when assigning rooms with shared bathrooms, residents who are able to use the bathroom will be paired with someone who does not have the mobility. โSo, in effect, the washroom is private,โ she said.
โSmall care homesโ best practice, expert says
A smaller scale model increases residentsโ emotional wellbeing and staff retention and better prevents the spread of disease, according to the NIA’s study.
It recommends health care and other services like housekeeping, laundry and cooking be done by a consistent team of people who stick to working in that household community.
โThis is not just a nice thing to do, it actually saves lives,โ said Sinha. โPeople in these models are less likely to end up going to hospitals, to emergency departments.โ

Sinha said care homes in Ontario need more support from the government to make the change.
The province allows facilities to implement smaller-scale models, according to a statement from the Ministry of Long Term Care.
Though not updated, the 2015 design requirement standards make sure the province is “supporting the demands of Ontarioโs growing population,โ the statement said.
Over 49,000 people were on the wait list for a long-term care bed in Ontario, as of early 2023.
The province is aiming to create or renew 58,000 long-term care beds by 2028 and, so far, 6,700 have been built with another 18,000 in the works.
Cherry Place is expected to open in June 2028, Graham-Nutter said, and the wait list will open in January that year.