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aome Fl THURSDAY, N O VEMBER 2, 2006 ~bt Ntw Uork eintts Photographs by Getty lmag~~ By PHILIP NOBEL REATHE. It 's been a busy day. Your husband woke you as he raced to the steam room at 6 a .m. Then your own serene morning began with Zen 13oot Camp at 7 and some Cardio Dance before you bundled the kids off to their Aqua Fun class in the pool. When they were back home with the nanny you s tole a moment for your own quick steam on the way to Balletone at 11. After Pilates it was time to collect the little ones for Children's Self Defense. The late afternoon found you contemplating mindfulness in a communal meditation room and stopping by a nutrition-conscious cafe to order dinner, delivered. Your husband reappeared for Ballroom Dancing at 6 p.m., but the two of you had to sneak out early to catch a lecture on "The Essential Components of Healthy Aging." Somehow you B Condos with all the comforts, for those who prefer their cosseting without the commute. still had the energy to do your personalized Tantra homework. Good thing you never had to leave your building. Such are the possible rigors of a balanced urban life a s envisioned by Miraval, the Tucson-based destination spa. Beginning in early 2008 those who choose to relocate to 515 East 72nd Street will be able to experience Miraval's spa, fitness, nutrition and general wellness programming from the comfort of their own high-rise condominium homes. The project will be known as Miraval Living ; the company is billing it as New York City's first "inspired living residence" and the first of what John Vanderslice, the chief executive, said would be IO to 15 similar developments in the next decade in cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Miami and Washington. The age of the "spadominium" has arrived. In the last four years Susie Ellis, the president of Spa Finder, a research clearinghouse and information service, has identified more than 200 "spa lifes tyle communities" across the country, most of them s econd-home condominiums at destination resorts like Sundara Spa in Wisconsin Dells or Red Mountain Spa in Ivins, Utah. But the expansion of Miraval Living into New York City - and the condominium projects that Miraval's principal rival, Canyon Ranch, has under way in Miami Beach and Chicago - represent a new twist: primary-residence spa living for urbanites. "We started in the city that we thought needed stress relief most," Mr. Vanderslice said last month , a few weeks before the opening of Miraval Living's on-site sales office. Thousands of apartments are for sale in Manhattan at any given moment, he said, but "the way we like to think about it is that only 350 of them can change ynur life." Today's condominium market is an arms race in which each new development tries to best a crowded field of competitors with ever more lavish materials and thick bundles of exotic amenities, or at least the reContinued on Puge 4 F4 THE NEW YORK TIMES, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2006 Living in Zen: The Spa Life, 24/7 Continued From Page l, This Section WELLNESS, ANYONE? fleeted glory of a star architect like Richard Meier or (coming soon to West 19th Street) Jean Nouvel. Renovating and adding spa services to an undistinguished 1985-vintage apartment tower on the Upper East Side, as Miraval is doing, might seem like just another elaborate come-on. Sales literature for other recently announced condominium projects like the Caledonia in Manhattan and Mezzo in Atlanta highlight their soothing green fealures and, respectively, the "Zen luxury" and pleasantly scented air that will promote ''a centered lifestyle." But Miraval Living is notable for the intensity - one might call it invasiveness - of its concept. Staff advisers will design a custom regimen for each new resident, drawing from hundreds of in-house services that include things like sessions witl) Dr. Lana L. Holstein, a sex ttierapist, and the chance to experience the Quantum Leap, a tethered, sometimes blindfolded jump from a tiny platform affixed to the top of a telephone pole. The flagship Miraval Living project in New York may offer a window mto an entirely new market at the intersection of two of America's most lucrative obsessions: comfort, in the form of luxury real estate, and "wellness," which encompasses health, fitness and all the so-called alternative practices once known as New Age. Miraval and Canyon Ranch are both trying to appeal to buyers of all ages, but "the whole trend 1s supported by aging baby SPIRITUAL HOME "Spadominiums" bring a New Age flavor to apartment life. Right, Canyon Ranch Living Miami Beach, opening next year. Renderings of a bathroom in a Miraval Living condo, right, and the building's garden, far right. A vast menu of spa s~rvic-f"s ancl c-lassf"s will be offered. boomers," Ms. Ellis said. As adults in that active and affluent demographic glut reach their golden years and eschew a remote, quiescent retirement, high-end urban residences with easy access to life-enhancing therapies may be the retirement homes of the future for the very well off. "Retirement?" Ms. Ellis asked. "They're not interested in that term. Retirement community? Forget it! But a spa community? That's something they can relate to very positively." Next June Canyon Ranch will open the doors to the first of several Canyon Ranch Living condominium developments: more than 600 units of spa-served luxury residences in three towers on the ocean side of Collins Avenue in Miami Beach, intended as both primary and second homes. Canyon Ranch said the project 1s 87 percent sold out; a second Canyon Ranch Living, planned to open in Chicago in 2010, had a waiting list of 600 even before pricing was finalized, according to Kevin Kelly, the Canyon Ranch president. And Miraval Living may soon have direct competition in Manhattan. For several years Canyon Ranch has been looking for an appropriate property there; Mr. Kelly said that as recently as last year the company had an option to buy the 72nd Street building that Miraval is now developing. (The ambience of the neighborhood, the building's pool and its huge garden gave 1t obvious appeal to both companies.) Canyon Ranch passed it up, Mr. Kelly said, to focus on properties in other neighborhoods, like TriBeCa, where he said his customers are already clustered. "Here are the facts," Mr. Kelly said. "Three out of four Americans think their life is out of balance, and one out of three is looking to do something about it." His company's research, he said, suggests that by 2025 fully half of all Americans will be actively pursuing a way to live greener, healthier, more psychologically satisfying lives. Mr. Kelly predicted the emergence of a $400 billion to $1 trillion market in "wellness lifestyles" that will comprise segments of the health, beauty, food, fitness, medicine, spirituality and, of course, spa industries. Steve Case, the former chairman of AOL Time Warner, seems equally confident. In 2004 Mr. Case, now the chairman of a new health-centered holding company called Revolution, bought a ma1ority stake in Miraval. "I saw it as a much bigger brand that would reach more people," he said. "A kind of Nike of wellness." "The market has been building for 20 to 30 years, and certain things that were once fringe are now mainstream," he continued. "It's no different than my experience with AOL: when I got involved, the Internet was a fringy hacker hobby." In addition to the Miraval Living projects Cardio dance, children's self defense and tantra homework afterward. planned for cities, Mr. Case said the company would build developments in suburban areas. His competitors are looking at the marriage of spas and subdiv1s1ons as well. Mr. Kelly said that Canyon Ranch 1s considering the development of several "horizontal master-plan communities" in the Sun Belt - therapeutic villages that might resemble new-urbanist towns with spas, clinics and recreational facilities at the center, where one might expect the town square. Ms. Ellis of SpaFinder is guardedly thrilled about the potential integration of real life with spa life. "I think it's one of the most exciting trends we've seen m the industry in the last 20 years," she said. But Miraval's plan for 10 to 15 such developments "is very ambitious," she added. "I think it's a matter of proving the concept in practice." How, for instance, does one translate the spa experience from a distant desert retreat to an apartment building on the less-than· serene Upper East Side? Will one feel the same sense of inner refreshment from a Detoxifying Seaweed Body Mask or a class in Fletcher Towelwork when it is available all the time just an elevator ride away? Dr. Holstein, who directs Miraval 's medical programs and, with her husband, Dr David J. Taylor, conducts a popular intimacy workshop at the Arizona spa, said she sees only opportunity. "I'm not worried al all about translatmg our programs from Tucson to New York," Dr. Holstein said. Because of the time constraints involved m working with people who are not on vacation, she said, the intensive four-day program - with its emphasis on breathing, soul-gazing and mutual worship - might be pared to a two-day introduction, followed by individual consultations in residents' homes. "We might offer one homework assignment, focusing on the female, say, and then come back in a couple of weeks and focus on the other side of the dyad," she said. "We're coming to where you live, so we can come back in a week or six months and say, ' How are you doing?' "