Two-year-old Logan Clifford's brown eyes lit up to see the little gray watering can shaped like an elephant that was balanced on Evelyn Larson's walker.
"There you go!" said Larson with a smile, as the toddler carefully lifted the container and started sprinkling water on the pink geraniums near her feet.
"Don't spill on your grandfriends!" cautioned Angela Truitt, who runs the intergenerational program at TowerLight in St. Louis Park where Logan attends day care and where Larson lives in the memory care unit.
Because the buildings are next door to each other and part of the same facility, these sweet interactions between young children and their elderly "grandfriends" happen all the time at TowerLight, during planned activities like that day's gardening session or in everyday moments.
The little ones who wake up early from their naps often visit the seniors to "read" the newspaper, said Michelle Jirik, director of child care at TowerLight, while folks in independent living will stop by the infant room to rock some of the littlest babies to sleep.
"These children end up wondering where their grandfriends are when they go off to kindergarten. Every year I receive that phone call from a parent," Jirik said.
TowerLight, which began its intergenerational program in 2013, is one of several sites in the Twin Cities area bringing little kids and older adults together for care. Mount Olivet Day Services in Minneapolis also offers child care and adult day services in a shared site, while the Intergenerational Learning Center in Eagan includes programming with senior living residents next door.
Ebenezer Ridges in Burnsville, which, like TowerLight, is run by Fairview Health Services, started offering these kinds of services under the same roof 17 years ago. While there are many challenges, the concept is growing in Minnesota. Fairview is set to open three new intergenerational programs — one in Chanhassen this fall, one in Prospect Park in 2020 and one in Bloomington the following year, said Ann Schrempp, the intergenerational director at Ridges.