Brooklyn Manor AFH

    11038 SE 213th St, Kent, WA, 98031
    2.0 · 1 reviews
    • Memory care
    • Board and care

    Pricing

    Amenities

    2.00 · 1 review

    Overall rating

    1. 5
    2. 4
    3. 3
    4. 2
    5. 1
    • Care

      2.0
    • Staff

      2.0
    • Meals

      1.8
    • Building

      2.1
    • Value

      1.8

    Location

    Map showing location of Brooklyn Manor AFH

    About Brooklyn Manor AFH

    Brooklyn Manor AFH sits in Kent, WA as a six-bed, state-licensed adult family home, and you'll see right away that it's owned and run by nurses which means there's always a nurse and EMT on hand, plus an RN who's available 24 hours for care. This home is part of a bigger network of care options in the area, but here, the setting is closer to a private house with things like gardens, patios, fruit trees, and some nice mountain or water views-nearby shopping, hospital access, and even beach access if someone wants to sit by the water or take a walk outside. You get to choose between private or one-bedroom rooms with average monthly rates around $3,000, and they let family come for private dining, or for visits, which makes it feel less like a facility and more like a home for those who live there.

    When it comes to care, Brooklyn Manor AFH covers a lot of needs-memory care for Alzheimer's and dementia (with a secure section and a wandering prevention alert system), nursing care (including rehab, physical, occupational, and speech therapy right in the home), wound care, diabetic support, blood thinner checks, IV or tube feeding, oxygen, help with daily living or bathing, and even total care for folks with higher needs like stroke or quadriplegia. Medication management, incontinence care, and help for visual or hearing impairment are standard here, and the medical services can get as thorough as hospice, palliative care, blood transfusions, and ventilator beds when someone needs that. There's a doctor on call, visits from nurses, therapists, dietitians, and even a diabetic educator, which is handy for folks managing long-term sickness.

    Rooms include things like Wi-Fi, Xfinity cable with smart remotes and special channels (Chinese, Spanish, Russian, and sports by request), plus private telephones and patios, and it's all set up with emergency call buttons and security so families don't have to worry as much. Safety is considered, with sprinklers and security alarms, locked or fenced exits, and choices about privacy. Sometimes, pets can visit, but no animals stay full-time in the home, so people with allergies or who want peace and quiet get it. The place is wheelchair-friendly, has roll-in showers, and offers vegetarian meals or special diets on request, and people can get help with things like eating or insulin shots.

    Activities stand out because there's a big list, whether it's exercise classes, bingo, movie nights, gardening, crafts, Bible study, music, reading, coloring, fishing, golf, walking clubs, story time, and holiday parties-plus outings and things like picnics, travel, or pet therapy. The whole idea is to help people feel social, stay moving, and keep their minds active, which is extra important if memory loss is in the picture. Residents can join devotional services, church visits, transportation for medical needs or errands, even beauty shop services or trips to the eye doctor, with three kinds of transportation set-ups: resident parking, complimentary rides, or paid transportation.

    Staff keep a close ratio-one caregiver for every two residents-so there's plenty of supervision, plus extra help for people prone to wandering, behavioral problems, or folks who need someone to transfer them from bed to chair or keep an eye out for falls. Short-term respite care is available for families who need a break or if someone is recovering from illness.

    People who need long-term care, memory care, assisted living, independent living, or even temporary adult day care can usually find a place at Brooklyn Manor AFH, since care levels can change as someone's needs grow, and all work gets charted with modern electronic medical records accessible for family. There's a history of being "home owner-operated" and "nurse owned," and that insight comes through in how they run the place-keeping the house clean and comfortable, managing everything from wound care to blood glucose, and making daily life easy with laundry, medication setup, meals, and clean rooms, even as people's health changes. While Brooklyn Manor AFH doesn't take Medicare unless certified, they do help with VA benefit applications and cover a wide range of health and support needs for seniors in King County. The home holds a 2.0-star "Good" review rating from A Place for Mom and tends to match what many families expect from a smaller, hands-on care setting.

    People often ask...

    © 2025 Mirador Living