
Dr. Sue Paul, OTD, MBA, is an occupational therapist, author, and innovator working at the intersection of healthy aging, neuroscience, and the built environment. Her work focuses on a simple but often overlooked idea:health and longevity are shaped by everyday participation in meaningful movement, activity, and human connection.
Sue currently serves as Senior Director of Well-being and Brain Health at Asbury Communities, where she leads initiatives that advance cognitive wellness, physical vitality, and meaningful engagement for older adults. She is the creator of the Kinnections Brain Health Program, an evidence-informed model that integrates movement science, cognitive training, and lifestyle interventions to support neurological health and reduce dementia risk.
She is also the founder of SeniorScapes, a movement dedicated to reimagining public parks and outdoor spaces for older adults. The SeniorScapes model brings together principles from occupational therapy, urban design, neuroscience, and public health to create parks that support mobility, cognition, and social connection. The first SeniorScapes Park opened in Maryland and serves as a prototype for communities across the country interested in designing infrastructure for longevity.
Sue earned her Doctorate in Occupational Therapy with a research focus on healthy aging and the built environment. Her doctoral project, Innovative Spaces: Designing Public Parks for Healthy Aging, helped lay the foundation for the SeniorScapes initiative and her broader work advocating for age-responsive community design.
In addition to her work in senior living, Sue consults with municipalities, developers, and organizations interested in building environments that support healthy aging. Through her company SeniorScapes Solution, LLC, she advises on park development, aging-in-place design, and community infrastructure that promotes brain health and lifelong mobility.
Sue is also the author of several books and essays on aging, design, and brain health, including Senior Parks: Healthy Aging by Design. Her writing explores how everyday spaces—from parks and sidewalks to homes and neighborhoods—can either support or undermine the neurological systems that allow people to move, think, and thrive as they age.
A frequent speaker and educator, Sue works with professionals across disciplines including urban planning, architecture, healthcare, recreation, and public policy to rethink how communities support the aging population.
Her mission is straightforward:
To help communities design environments where people can remain strong, capable, and connected throughout the entire arc of life.
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