
Andrew Bowins
Founder
"Life begins at 50! Let's explore the possibilities."
Andrew Bowins is the founder and publisher of RestlessUrban, a lifestyle and media brand created to inspire and empower adults over 50 to live with purpose, curiosity, and confidence. Motivated by a personal passion for wellbeing and reinvention, Andrew launched RestlessUrban to challenge outdated stereotypes and reframe how life after 50 is experienced and portrayed.
As publisher, Andrew leads the overall vision and daily operations of the company. He oversees editorial direction, brand partnerships, platform development, and the creation of original content across digital, audio, video, and live experiences. He works closely with a growing network of contributors, producers, and mission-aligned brands to ensure every part of the brand reflects the values of the RestlessUrban community.
With decades of experience in strategic communications and brand building, Andrew brings a thoughtful and human-centered approach to storytelling and innovation. His work is rooted in the belief that life after 50 is not about slowing down. It is about showing up fully, living intentionally, and embracing what comes next.
Features by Andrew Bowins
A diagnosis changed parts of her life. It didn’t change how she defines it.
You spent decades being responsible. Now even your free time quietly turns into work you never chose.
A funeral joke, a lifelong friend, and quiet truth about regret, reflection, and what we carry into our fifties.
Why has what we bring to the table changed and why getting together does not feel as simple as it used to?
What the loneliness epidemic among older adults is really telling us about relationships.
What happens when you finally stop long enough to hear your own life?
Why our generation is quietly questioning work, money, and how they want to live.
When time stops feeling endless, life becomes precise. Here's why.
A diagnosis changed parts of her life. It didn’t change how she defines it.
You spent decades being responsible. Now even your free time quietly turns into work you never chose.
A funeral joke, a lifelong friend, and quiet truth about regret, reflection, and what we carry into our fifties.
Why has what we bring to the table changed and why getting together does not feel as simple as it used to?
What the loneliness epidemic among older adults is really telling us about relationships.
What happens when you finally stop long enough to hear your own life?





