Well, I'm very excited about this. Again, it's something we don't talk a lot about. It's something we started back in the seventies when one of our senior management went over to Europe and brought back the fact that we should develop co-op seniors homes. Working with CMHC back at that time, we managed to put some models together in Atlantic Canada, where we have some very strong seniors cooperatives.
However, we've moved beyond that. We have two projects on the go. One of the latest projects we call Tannery Court. We've recognized that there is a need for what we call the working poor: single people who work but barely make enough money to provide proper housing for themselves. So we've put up five models in New Brunswick where these people can live. There's a 400-square-foot apartment. It is tiny, but it's safe, and it's clean. They're cooperatives. It's a great opportunity to grow that model.
Another one is that we're finding that there are a number of elderly people in rural communities who have money. They have retired back to their rural communities, and they want to take their money and invest it in a group whereby maybe ten elderly couples come together and form their own cooperative. We have one in St. Andrews, Nova Scotia.