Universal Design for Livable Communities in Retirement
Universal Design for Livable Communities in Retirement Your Home
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts A growing cadre of builders, designers and architects are rethinking spaces for older people. And not a moment too soon: According to an , the U.S. faces a critical shortage of affordable housing for its 50+ population, which will grow to 133 million by 2030 — a 70 percent jump since 2000. Those older people will benefit from different, better options than the gated condo astride a golf course in a Sunbelt suburb, the isolated apartment complex, the grim nursing home. Instead, designers are now imagining social- and age-integrated homes and , not just for the last years of their lives. They want to make "design for aging" imperative to the profession — and, heck, even sexy. A neighborhood feel Call it "." If these innovators have their way, "senior housing" as we have come to know it will improve radically. Similarly, St. John's on the Lake, a glossy, high-rise continuing-care retirement community in the Lower East Side of Milwaukee, is integrated into the neighborhood fabric, sited to connect residents to the cultural and social options outside the front door. Parkview Living, a block of apartments with Spanish-style architecture in the Echo Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, also markets its surrounding community as a central amenity. This conscious coupling of retirement living and the real world is the future, says M. Scott Ball, an urban designer and author of Livable Communities for Aging Populations: "Senior housing is going to be more like neighborhoods, and neighborhoods will be more like senior housing." Misha Gravenor Designers are now imagining social- and age-integrated homes and communities that accommodate residents for decades. It's a distant notion from the first 55+ retirement community, Sun City, which opened its gates in 1960. An enclave of ranch-style "houses of tomorrow" near Phoenix, it was designed as a refuge from the worlds of work and extended family, a retreat into full-time leisure. That cruise-ship model of retirement living dominated for a generation. But the houses of tomorrow didn't have the future in mind at all. "Most 20th-century houses were designed for young and healthy individuals with no physical or sensory limitations," says Rosemary Bakker, a gerontologist and interior designer. For , doorways and hallways were too narrow; countertops were too high; and toilets were too low. Some 50+ developments sprouted up far from services and were only accessible by car. The promise of blissful seclusion turned into social isolation. Once residents became unable to live in these homes safely, they had to move again — into assisted living or nursing homes, each time wrenched from their community. When boomer-generation designers contemplated their own future lives in these spaces, they balked, says Richard Rosen, an architect with Perkins Eastman who specializes in . "We were looking in horror at nursing homes and what was happening to first our grandparents and then our parents, and we were saying, no way are we going to settle for this."
Planning the Future of Retirement
Designers are rethinking 50 housing and the results are both homey and chic
Misha Gravenor St. John's on the Lake in Milwaukee is integrated into the neighborhood fabric, sited to connect residents to the cultural and social options outside the front door. It could be a postcard of 1950s : porch-fronted homes painted in a soothing palette of salmon pinks, Wedgwood blues and buttery yellows; neighbors of every age chatting in the front yards; a teenage couple kissing beneath the shelter of a park pavilion. But Highlands' Garden Village is a very modern urban housing development, built atop the 27-acre site of a former amusement park a mile from downtown Denver. The real estate development company Perry Rose, along with Oz Architecture and other firms, built the community as a showpiece of New Urbanist planning. Rather than a maze of suburban-style cul-de-sacs, it boasts a and commercial properties mixed with public open space, with housing designed for residents of diverse ages. There are carriage houses with apartments for , a cohousing section with shared yards and a communal building, and 50+ apartments with open floor plans to accommodate various levels of physical ability. Facilities for older residents are woven into the wider community, which is itself integrated into the fabric of a larger neighborhood around it, with public transit right on the corner. Misha Gravenor Designers are rethinking 50+ housing.Livable Communities
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts A growing cadre of builders, designers and architects are rethinking spaces for older people. And not a moment too soon: According to an , the U.S. faces a critical shortage of affordable housing for its 50+ population, which will grow to 133 million by 2030 — a 70 percent jump since 2000. Those older people will benefit from different, better options than the gated condo astride a golf course in a Sunbelt suburb, the isolated apartment complex, the grim nursing home. Instead, designers are now imagining social- and age-integrated homes and , not just for the last years of their lives. They want to make "design for aging" imperative to the profession — and, heck, even sexy. A neighborhood feel Call it "." If these innovators have their way, "senior housing" as we have come to know it will improve radically. Similarly, St. John's on the Lake, a glossy, high-rise continuing-care retirement community in the Lower East Side of Milwaukee, is integrated into the neighborhood fabric, sited to connect residents to the cultural and social options outside the front door. Parkview Living, a block of apartments with Spanish-style architecture in the Echo Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, also markets its surrounding community as a central amenity. This conscious coupling of retirement living and the real world is the future, says M. Scott Ball, an urban designer and author of Livable Communities for Aging Populations: "Senior housing is going to be more like neighborhoods, and neighborhoods will be more like senior housing." Misha Gravenor Designers are now imagining social- and age-integrated homes and communities that accommodate residents for decades. It's a distant notion from the first 55+ retirement community, Sun City, which opened its gates in 1960. An enclave of ranch-style "houses of tomorrow" near Phoenix, it was designed as a refuge from the worlds of work and extended family, a retreat into full-time leisure. That cruise-ship model of retirement living dominated for a generation. But the houses of tomorrow didn't have the future in mind at all. "Most 20th-century houses were designed for young and healthy individuals with no physical or sensory limitations," says Rosemary Bakker, a gerontologist and interior designer. For , doorways and hallways were too narrow; countertops were too high; and toilets were too low. Some 50+ developments sprouted up far from services and were only accessible by car. The promise of blissful seclusion turned into social isolation. Once residents became unable to live in these homes safely, they had to move again — into assisted living or nursing homes, each time wrenched from their community. When boomer-generation designers contemplated their own future lives in these spaces, they balked, says Richard Rosen, an architect with Perkins Eastman who specializes in . "We were looking in horror at nursing homes and what was happening to first our grandparents and then our parents, and we were saying, no way are we going to settle for this."
Photo 1 caption: Highlands' Garden Village, a retirement community outside Denver.