Pleasant Ridge Manor East sits on a 4.86-acre property at 4728 Lake Pleasant Road, about three miles outside Erie, PA, with a big old building from 1937 that covers 58,000 square feet and has 76 nursing beds, though they stopped accepting new patients since mid-April and plan to close it and turn it over to the county by September 1, moving out equipment like computers, security cameras, and furniture. The building has been talked about a lot, with H.A.N.D.S. and others wanting to use it for senior housing but those plans didn't pass county council, and these days people think the place is bringing the land value down, especially because the structure has load-bearing walls that make changing the inside tough and needs costly work, like a new roof and HVAC repairs, plus it costs $45,000 to $60,000 each year just to keep up with basic maintenance. Options for what to do next include tearing it down, building new offices or storage units, fixing it up for office space or storage, each with very high costs, and meanwhile, the property currently also holds the Erie County Cooperative Extension Office and the Edmund L. Thomas Juvenile Detention Center, which has 20 secure beds for kids aged 10 to 17.
The Manor used to serve as a full nursing home and provided a range of services for seniors, holding 76 bed licenses it previously bought from Pleasant Ridge Manor, and offered types of care like independent living for active seniors, shared homes in small neighborhoods each needing live-in caregivers, home aides for non-medical help and company, assisted living for people who needed help with bathing, dressing, meals, and housekeeping, plus skilled nursing with round-the-clock medical care for those needing rehabilitation or wound care. Memory care, aimed at seniors with Alzheimer's or dementia, provided special programs, safety measures to prevent wandering, and help to cut down on confusion, with a focus on hands-on support day and night and activities that may help with memory, though this kind of care costs about three times what regular senior health care does.
People living at Pleasant Ridge Manor East often had studio rooms, with a range of amenities like chef-prepared meals focused on balanced nutrition, activities on and off the property, indoor common rooms, laundry, and help for those with things like diabetes or incontinence. Families could depend on respite care, too, just for a short time when primary caregivers needed a break. Some features included a My Account Dashboard for managing details, along with access to symptom checkers, medication information, and community healthcare resources. The place connected to state and federal health programs, including the Affordable Care Act, and provided behavioral health services, trying to help residents manage their health in one place.
With plans to close the site, and conversations about how the land and building are mostly a burden due to its age, high repair needs, and tough inner structure, the future of Pleasant Ridge Manor East involves big decisions, but for years, it served as a steady home for seniors needing a range of medical and daily care, with some programs aimed at keeping things simple and safe for people in their later years.