Corrie Visser suffers from severe dementia and is now living in a cutting-edge facility in Holland.
From outside, Hogewey does not look special but its approach to dementia care is attracting health care leaders from across Europe and as far away as Japan.
The two-story buildings form a courtyard where residents can roam on their own and where they are watched by carers, some of whom staff the site's shops.
Theo Visser, who could not provide the at-home 24-hour-care his wife needs, visits Corrie every day.
Other visitors spend time with their relatives in the courtyard village where carers and volunteers keep an eye on the residents.
Furniture and art in the center's living areas are picked to reflect décor that residents are familiar with from their earlier years.
Ada and Ben Picavet can't hold conversations anymore but they still enjoy making music together.
Yvonne van Amerongen, one of Hogewey's founders, was inspired to find a new way of providing nursing home care after her father died -- and she realized she wouldn't want him to have lived at a nursing home.
Despite the efforts to make their lives as normal as possible, all of the residents suffer severe dementia and require 24-hour-a-day care.