Life Begins at 60: Enjoying More of What Matters at Kingsford Terrace Corinda

For many people, retiring is no longer about slowing down. It is about choice — choosing how to live, how to spend time, and how much energy to give to the things that matter. At Kingsford Terrace Corinda, that philosophy is clear: downsizing is not a step back, but a step into a fuller, more deliberate chapter of life.

Located at Cliveden Avenue in Corinda, Kingsford Terrace sits within an established residential pocket close to train services, shops, green spaces and essential health care. It remains firmly connected to the surrounding suburb, allowing residents to stay close to family, friends and the routines they know, while enjoying the benefits of a purpose-built retirement community.

Not One Type of Resident — But Many Lives Well Lived

Kingsford Terrace is home to people who have lived widely different lives, united not by age but by curiosity and independence.

Bill Newnham. Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda

Among them is Bill Newnham, a former engineer whose career spanned Europe, the Middle East, South America and the North Sea oil fields. After decades of high-pressure international project work, Bill and his wife Pamela chose Kingsford Terrace after leaving their three-level family home in nearby Chelmer. Retirement has not meant retreat. Bill remains active through Men’s Shed, Toastmasters, regular gym sessions and plans for future travel, appreciating the freedom that comes with a low-maintenance home.

Val Donovan signing her published memoir. Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda

Creativity is also part of village life. When Val Donovan launched her memoir ‘Memories of a Life Well Lived’ at Kingsford Terrace, she also raised funds for the Melanoma Institute Australia in memory of her late husband. The event brought together residents, family and friends, reflecting the strong sense of community that has formed within the village.

Ronnie Christie in action. Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda

New resident Ronnie Christie’s life journey has taken him from Scotland to Sydney and Perth, before coming to Corinda. He is a performer by heart and has been actively sharing his talent with everyone.

Trevor, the resident Champion. Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda

Achievement does not stop at the village gates either. One resident, Trevor, won a gold medal at the Queensland Championships in the 10-metre air rifle event at Belmont. Competing in the SH2 category, his win was celebrated widely within the Kingsford Terrace community as a reminder that ambition does not retire.



Everyday Life, Shared Well

Community life at Kingsford Terrace grows naturally rather than being imposed.

NIA (neuromuscular integrative action) classes to support fitness and mobility
Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda
Pilates. Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda

Residents can take part in gentle fitness options such as NIA movement classes, Pilates and other low-impact activities designed to support strength, balance and wellbeing.

Paint and Sip. Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda
Crafters in action. Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda

Creative and social groups include paint-and-sip sessions, craft circles and informal gatherings built around shared interests.

Retired Old Men Eating Out (ROMEO) Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda

From time to time, other groups gather and meet. ROMEO — Retired Old Men Eating Out have become part of village culture.

Food is a major point of connection. The on-site KT Café, operated in partnership with Brisbane Valley Protein, offers residents access to freshly prepared meals, produce and shared tastings, reinforcing the village’s emphasis on quality, convenience and sociability.

Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda

Kingsford Terrace is also completely pet-friendly, offering the perfect place to walk about, with even the occasional obedience class or “puppaccino” treat.

Puppachino. Photo Credit: Facebook/Kingsford Terrace Corinda

Spaces Designed for Living — Without the Fuss

Kingsford Terrace Corinda
Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

Kingsford Terrace has evolved over time, with each new stage shaped by resident feedback and changing expectations around retirement living. The community includes seven residential buildings: Litchfield, Duporth, Mitchell, Francis, Lingrove, Taylor and the newest addition, Radcliffe.

Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

Apartments are designed with accessibility and comfort at their core. Step-free access, lifts, generous layouts and modern fittings reduce physical strain while supporting independence. Homes are light-filled, secure and easy to manage, allowing residents to spend less time on upkeep and more time on the things they enjoy.

Shared facilities and landscaped spaces are positioned to encourage connection without sacrificing privacy. Residents can join in as much — or as little — as they wish. Importantly, the village sits within Corinda rather than apart from it, allowing residents to remain active participants in the broader community rather than observers from the sidelines.

A Company With Skin in the Game

Tim Russell and Mark Taylor. Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

Kingsford Terrace is owned and operated by Aura Holdings, a Brisbane-based retirement living company founded by Tim Russell and Mark Taylor. Their approach to retirement living is shaped not only by professional experience but by personal insight: both founders have parents who live in Aura communities.

That lived experience informs Aura’s philosophy — that retirement living should expand life rather than narrow it. Communities are designed to support independence, dignity and connection, recognising that people do not stop evolving simply because they stop working.



Life, Reimagined After 60

Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

Australians aged 60 and over now make up more than one-fifth of the population, and expectations around ageing are shifting. Increasingly, people are choosing homes that support active, connected living rather than isolation.

At Kingsford Terrace Corinda, that shift is visible every day — in shared meals, personal achievements and the quiet relief of living without constant maintenance. For many residents, life did not slow down at 60. It simply found a better rhythm.

Aura Holdings is a Proud Promotional Partner of Brisbane Suburbs Online News

Published 12-December-2025

Tim Russell and Mark Taylor Made Retirement Living So Enjoyable, Their Parents Had to Move In

Retirement living has been evolving so rapidly across Brisbane that when two local entrepreneurs developed their vision for a new standard of luxury retirement in sought-after locations, their own parents insisted on moving in. When Tim Russell and Mark Taylor set out to reshape the living experience of people looking forward to their best years in retirement, they were responding to a clear shift in what older Australians wanted — connection, convenience, and the ability to stay in the area they know and love.

Drawing on decades of experience in the retirement sector, the pair founded Aura Holdings in 2016 with a belief that retirement living should feel modern, vibrant and socially connected. Instead of accepting the traditional model of large, broad acre developments, they focused on medium-rise, architect-led buildings in established suburbs — places where residents could downsize without disconnecting from the daily life of their neighbourhood.

The Founders’ View: Why Retirement Living Must Evolve


For Russell and Taylor, the future of retirement living is defined not by size but by purpose. They believe the next decade will favour smaller, boutique villages in established suburbs — places designed to support independence, access and connection rather than the isolation of large outer-suburban estates.

Their view reflects two fundamentals. Older Australians increasingly want proximity to transport, healthcare, shops and family, enabling them to stay active and engaged in the neighbourhoods they know. With home-care packages expanding, retirement villages have become ideal settings for supported independent living — provided operators partner with specialist care providers rather than try to replace aged care themselves.

Their guiding principle is simple: retirement living should widen life, not narrow it. That means apartments designed for independent living, thoughtful shared spaces, and communities where privacy and belonging can comfortably coexist — a philosophy they believe the sector must adopt to stay relevant.

Q&A WITH TIM RUSSELL


In a recent interview with Brisbane Suburbs Online News, Tim Russell expanded on these themes and reflected on the changes shaping the sector today. The following Q&A is based on that conversation.

What is the biggest misconception people under 60 have about modern retirement living?
There’s still a general lack of understanding about what retirement living actually is. Many people still confuse it with aged care, or imagine older-style brick-and-tile villages built decades ago. That’s simply not the reality anymore.

Are today’s retirees very different from those of previous generations?
People themselves aren’t dramatically different, but they are generally wealthier and expectations are much higher. Location, architectural quality and meaningful community spaces now matter just as much as the apartment itself.

Why are boutique vertical retirement communities becoming more common in inner suburbs?
Because that option didn’t exist until recently. As Brisbane has densified and land has become scarce, vertical projects have become the natural solution. They bring residents closer to transport, medical services and retail—all things harder to access in traditional suburban villages.

What triggers someone to finally decide it’s time to downsize?
Often a major life event: a health issue, losing a partner, or realising the home no longer works. Others want to return to Brisbane to be near family, or simply free up capital from the family home to maintain their lifestyle in retirement.

How is the industry adapting to the rise of home-care services?
Low-care aged care doesn’t really exist anymore. Government policy has moved strongly toward home-care packages, and retirement villages are ideally positioned to deliver them efficiently. Aura partners with specialist providers rather than trying to operate home care directly.

What features are in demand now that weren’t common a decade ago?
Health and wellbeing spaces, organised programs, warm and accessible community rooms, and high-quality food service partnerships. Residents appreciate convenience and quality—like taking a lift to the pool or ordering restaurant-quality meals delivered to their door.

How do you balance independence with opportunities for social connection?
Through intentional design. People gravitate to small, intimate spaces, not oversized halls. When you create the right kind of spaces, resident-led groups—Mahjong, cards, knitting, music, pétanque, book clubs—emerge naturally.

What feedback surprises you most from residents and families?
The most common line we hear is, “I should have done this five years ago.” Once people move in, they almost always see a positive lifestyle change.

Why hasn’t public perception caught up with the reality of retirement living?
The sector hasn’t told its story well. Many still associate “retirement” with institutional care, even though modern villages are vibrant, connected and focused on lifestyle rather than dependence.

What changes do you expect over the next 10–15 years?
We’ll see far more smaller-scale villages—perhaps 12 to 20 apartments—with highly personalised services, concierge support and a boutique feel. Large 300-unit villages will become increasingly rare as land becomes more constrained.

From Litchfield to Radcliffe: A Village Built Over a Decade

Kingsford Terrace – Litchfield Photo Credit: DMAEngineers

Kingsford Terrace Corinda is Aura’s philosophy expressed in bricks and mortar. When the founders acquired the site in 2016, only one building existed: Litchfield, a traditional first stage inherited from the previous operator. Instead of treating it as a constraint, Russell and Taylor used it as a foundation to reimagine the entire precinct.

Over the next ten years, they delivered six additional buildings, each one refining the village’s character and bringing it closer to their vision of a modern, connected retirement community. The final stage, Radcliffe, reached practical completion in late 2025, completing the village’s architectural identity. Designed with resident habits in mind, Radcliffe adds intimate community spaces and contemporary apartment layouts – small but meaningful enhancements that respond to how people actually live.

Kingsford Terrace – Radcliffe
Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

For long-standing residents, Radcliffe’s completion feels like the closing chapter and the start of a new story. For Aura’s founders, the completion of Kingsford Terrace is proof of their commitment to long-term management and to building communities that evolve with the people who call them home.

Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

As Brisbane continues to grow and transform, the Aura model offers a glimpse of what retirement living can become: community focused, architecturally designed, and grounded in the idea that ageing well is as much about community as it is about care.

A short video shared recently on Aura’s LinkedIn page captures this story visually. Shot at Kingsford Terrace to mark Litchfield’s ten-year anniversary, it shows both founders reflecting side-by-side on the early days—acquiring the site, planning a long-term transformation, working alongside residents through the build, and now seeing the final building open. The message is clear: Aura is not a developer that leaves when the concrete cures; it is an operator that remains embedded in the community for its entire lifecycle.

This philosophy extends across their portfolio. Aura’s directors are known to residents by name, attend community events, walk their sites regularly and maintain direct relationships with the people who live in their villages.

Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

Their model of partnering with specialist home-care providers, investing in health and wellbeing spaces, designing intimate community rooms and ensuring premium amenities reflects a resident-first mindset rather than a profit-maximisation one.

A New Model for Ageing in Place


Tim Russell and Mark Taylor have spent years working to build communities they would be comfortable having their own families live in. With their parents and siblings already living in multiple Aura villages, most would say they’ve succeeded. Their blend of commercial discipline, personal connection, and resident-first design is positioning Aura as one of the most forward-thinking operators in modern Australian retirement living.

As Australia reconsiders how people want to age, Aura’s founders appear determined to help shape that conversation from the front.


This feature on the directors of Aura Holdings is part of a series of Thought Leadership pieces, designed to look into areas of our society and how the future will unfold in them.

Featured Image Credit: Aura Holdings

Rightsizing, Not Downsizing: Finding More Life in Just the Right Space at Somerset Indooroopilly 

With average life expectancy now stretching into the mid-80s, many Australians are realising that the family home—once a symbol of success—can quietly become a source of work and worry.

Nearly three-quarters of over-75s still live in houses larger than they need, while about 30 per cent are considering a move that fits their lifestyle today rather than the one they built decades ago.

Those themes will be be at the heart of Coffee & Conversations on 12 November 2025, where locals can hear about Somerset Indooroopilly—a new village that allows locals to downsize in the area they know and love.

Photo Credit: Somerset Indooroopilly

Set beside the Indooroopilly Golf Club, Somerset is a series of light-filled apartments around shared gardens, terraces and a café rather than cul-de-sacs and fences. The aim is to make life simpler without making it smaller.

Designed by Cox Architecture and built by Woollam Constructions, the whole complex is shaped around the concept of rightsizing: a lifestyle that trades maintenance for meaning, routine for connection, and isolation for ease.

Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

The shift speaks to a broader cultural change. Retirement communities are no longer seen as endpoints but as extensions of an active life. Research shows residents in such settings are physically healthier, more socially engaged and report higher overall happiness than those ageing alone. It’s less about giving things up than gaining back time—the chance to travel, volunteer or just enjoy an unhurried morning coffee.

Research shows that residents of well-designed retirement villages are more active, more socially engaged and less likely to need hospital care than peers who continue living alone.

People living in retirement communities can experience a reduction in patterns of hospitalisations, have the potential to reduced need for GP visits, and can stay healthy living independently.

RLC Report Better Housing for Better Health

Increasingly, people are choosing communities that give them freedom and flexibility, not just a smaller footprint. In practice, that means more time spent walking, reading, travelling—or simply enjoying a catch-up with friends—without the endless to-do list that comes with a large property.

At Somerset, that philosophy is built into everyday life, capturing that balance through thoughtful design. Apartments open onto gardens and shared terraces; the café hums with conversation; and facilities like the pool, gym, and library encourage activity without pressure.

Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

Each home includes a 24-hour monitored EEVI system for peace of mind, while a Village Manager and Wellness Advisor ensure help is close by but never intrusive. “Knowing the place is managed, looked after and secure—that’s a big factor,” one resident said. “It’s lovely knowing you’re in a safe area, surrounded by good people.”

The community is pet-friendly, the gardens maintained, and the atmosphere quietly sociable. “Moving here gave me freedom,” said another resident. “I can just close the door and go.”

For many, that’s the essence of rightsizing—choosing a space that fits this stage of life as comfortably as the last one did. “When you make the choice sooner rather than later, you give yourself the gift of freedom and the chance to enjoy more of what matters,” Aura Director Mark Taylor said at a recent Somerset event.

Pictured (L-R) Somerset Residents: Elsie, Ross, Elaine and Iris Photo Credit: Aura Holdings

And for anyone curious, participating in Coffee & Conversations on 12 November 2025 offers the simplest introduction: a walk through the gardens, a cup of coffee, and a conversation about how less maintenance can make room for more living.

Aura Holdings is a Proud Promotional Partner of Brisbane Suburbs Online News

Published 6-November-2025