Change Agents
by Leslie Moldow, AIA
2008 Chair, Design for Aging Advisory Group
Change agents are what all architects strive to be. How can we
continue to improve society, community and environments for our
users, in large or small ways?
This past spring, as co-sponsors with the AIA Academy of
Architecture for Health, the Design for Aging Knowledge Community
got the opportunity to affect change.
In April, on behalf of the US Access Board, we held a workshop on
Assisted Transfers. I know what youre all thinking - "what a
glamorous topic." But those of you in the field designing for the
elderly have grappled with how best to serve our clients while
meeting the letter of the access board regulations. The two goals
currently conflict, and our clients are not best served. What
research has been done in the field by gerontologists, nurses, and
designers illustrates that the guidelines for ADA, originally
intended for people with upper body strength, do not help the
elderly.
Please click here to continue.
Adult Day Care, An Emerging Component of At-Home
Care
by George J. Kimmerle, AIA, PP, NCARB and X. Cindy Cui,
RA
Two combining forces are making adult day care a hot topic in the
field of elder care. The first is the emerging impact of the baby
boomer cohort, whose initial members are entering retirement in
2008. With the first baby boomers turning 60 this year,
exactly how it will play out remains to be seen, said Lisa
Stark and Megan Carpenter in a recent ABC profile on the subject.
The massive impact that this generation is expected to have on
elder care in the nation is no less than glacial.
Second, the rising cost of health care across the board demands
that alternates be sought that allow the elderly to stay at home
for as long as possible. According to one industry source, in-home
care is one of the fastest growing trends because theres
little reason to move. Todays elderly arent
likely to end up living in the homes of their children, the way
previous generations did. They want to grow old at home, the place
they feel most comfortable. Theyre hanging on to their homes
as long as possible and theyre finding that much of what they
need can be ordered on the Internet and delivered right to their
doorsteps, and adult day care is a complementary service to the
rising tide of alternative treatment and at-home nursing
programs.
Please click here to continue.
Aging-in-place: Universal design is in demand
There is Green in Blue
by James V. Vitale, AIA, LEED AP
Born in 1947, I am one among 77 million boomers born between 1946
and 1964.
An article in Buildings magazine by Jeff Williams indicates that we
boomers represent
almost a trillion dollars in disposable income. As such we
represent one of the fastest growing markets for well designed and
useable goods and services in the in the U.S.
My 55-plus generation is sophisticated, active, and independent,
with unprecedented buying power. With it our impact on the building
products and design industry is far-reaching and filled with
opportunity for those who have insight into how to market to this
influential crowd. There is truly green in blue.
Please cick here to continue.
THE GREEN HOUSE Design Charrette
THE GREEN HOUSE project is changing
preconceptions of aging in long-term care settings by transforming
the culture and place of care into vital and vibrant communities of
individuals living together, at home. To learn more about THE GREEN
HOUSE project go to www.ncbcapitalimpact.org/thegreenhouse.
Please see the DFA Allied Events page to learn more about
the programs of our allied organizations.
Web Exclusive: The benefits of green senior care
facilities
Examining the synergies between growing
old and going green
From
the April 10, 2007 issue of Environmental Design + Construction
Magazine.
Components' Corner
In an effort to reach out to a broader constituency, the Design for
Aging Knowledge Community of the American Institute of Architects
has established Design for Aging Committees in Philadelphia,
Seattle, San Francisco and Boston. This is a first step leading
ultimately to DFA Committees in all or most AIA components
throughout the country. In addition to reaching architects at the
grassroots level, component chapters offer more opportunities to
interact with caregivers, developers, operators and allied
professionals. Meetings typically occur monthly, affording multiple
and more frequent venues and discussion topics. In an effort to
support and promote our component committees, DFA applied for and
received a grant from the AIA to conduct Post Occupancy Evaluations
in Boston, Seattle and San Francisco.
Boston
The Boston Society of Architects' Design for Aging Committee
has been meeting since September 2007. Meetings are held at the
BSA, 52 Broad Street, Boston, MA on the third Tuesday of each month
at 5:15 pm; refreshments are provided. Topics have ranged from a
presentation of a Design For Aging Review award-winning project, to
one of New Englands premier developers vision for the
future, to the author of Post Occupancy Evaluations:
Lessons Learned from Senior Living Environments. This
spring and summer the programs have had a common theme,
concentrating specifically on Alzheimers Disease and memory
impairment. One of the activities planned for the fall of 2008 will
be a Post Occupancy Evaluation of a former Design for Aging Review
award-winning New England community.
Philadelphia
The Design for Aging Knowledge Community is in the
organizational stages in the Philadelphia area. A diverse group of
individuals with an interest in Senior Living Environments has been
meeting on the fourth Thursday of the month to organize an
interesting list of events for the upcoming year. With AAHSA
(American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging)'s annual
meeting to be held this fall in Philadelphia, it's a great
time to get everyone excited and involved! The first
informational meeting will be on Thursday, September 25th at
6:00pm, location to be determined (refreshments will be provided).
The first session will focus on Age Sensitivity Training (the
proper language, etiquette and nomenclature for the senior
environment). Contact Stefanie Spinelli at sspinelli@ph.wrtdesign.com or
215-732-5215.
San Francisco
The AIA San Francisco Design for Aging Committee kicked off
its existence in November 2007 with a presentation by Dennis Cope,
AIA , who served on the latest Design for Aging Review jury.
Meetings are held monthly at the AIA SF headquarters at 130 Sutter
Street, Suite 600, San Francisco, on the first Tuesday of each
month at noon (brown bag). We currently have over 75 member
participants on a continually growing email distribution list. It
is an active group that includes not only Architects/Designers but
also Interior Designers, Landscape Architects,
Providers/Developers, Contractors and the San Francisco State
Gerontology Department. Related groups such as Aging Services of
California (the State branch of AAHSA) are supportive of our
efforts and growth, and we extend our welcome to all interested in
senior design from San Francisco, the Bay Area and all of
California. We have already conducted a tour of an existing
community, lead by a resident who participated in the renovation
design, and plan further tours, exhibits and Post-Occupancy
evaluations. Upcoming is a lecture by a Landscape Architect on
Healing Gardens for seniors. Our goals are fostering
design innovation, advocacy, and regulatory interaction.
Seattle
AIA Seattle formed a Design for Aging committee in September
2007. Our initial approach is different from other chapters.
Encouraged by Executive Director Lisa Richmond and further
supported by the Board, our meetings are focused on a Design for
Aging, full-day forum which will be held December 3, 2008. Entitled
Pig in the Python: Perspectives on Design for the Coming Boomer
Wave, the overarching goal of the forum is to kick-start a
dialogue locally, bringing together voices that are working on
solutions that support and improve the quality of life for older
adults. Those voices include architects and allied professionals,
developers and providers of seniors housing and long-term care,
municipal leaders, advocates for older adults, legislators, as well
as consumers. We anticipate that the forum will serve as a way to
continue building momentum for future monthly topical meetings,
similar to whats being accomplished in Boston and San
Francisco, for example. We usually meet the first Friday of each
month from Noon to 1:30 at the AIA Seattle office.
The Fifth Annual Healthcare Unbound
Conference and Exhibition
July 7-8, 2008
San Francisco
A Conference & Exhibition on the Convergence of Consumer
& Healthcare Technologies
Special Focus on Remote Monitoring & Home Telehealth for
Managing Diseases & Promoting Wellness
The Alzheimer's Association
International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease (ICAD)
July 26-31, 2008
Chicago
As a part of the Alzheimers Association research
program, this international conference serves as a catalyst for
generating new knowledge about dementia and fostering a vital,
collegial research community. This meeting will bring together more
than 5,000 researchers, physicians and care providers from 60
countries the largest group of international leaders in
Alzheimer research and care ever convened.
Planning and Design for a New Generation of Seniors: a
Focused Look at Retirement
August 6-8, 2008
Harvard Graduate School of Design
Cambridge, MA
New generations of aging adults will have many more options
than their parents did. In the design of senior housing, it is
imperative that members of the design and development team
understand and appreciate the nuances of their target market and
respond with sensitive and appropriate program and design
solutions. In this program, we examine the important interweaving
of market, operations, finance, and design that leads to successful
projects.
See more allied organization events at the DFA Allied Organization Events
page.
Lessons from Disney
by Glenn Tipton, FAIA
This will be my third piece written for DFA that will sound to the
reader like I actually do not work for a living! This time, I am
writing after we just spent a week with our son and daughter-in-law
and their three children in Disney World.
The revelation of the trip to me was twofold: one, Disney World
is not all about children, but it is
all about children of all ages; two, there are many
parallels to the life of a retirement community.
Ive been to Disney several times over the years, as my wife
and I raised our children. Now, returning with grandchildren allows
me to see what has changed and what remains the same. Of course,
much remains the same; but much has been considerably
revamped.
Please click here to continue.
In this issue we profile two Design for Aging Review
Merit Award winners: Silver Lake Commons in Pittsburgh and Park
Homes at Parkside in Hillsboro, KS.
Silver Lake
Commons, Pittsburgh
Perkins Eastman
Silver Lake Commons, a residence for seniors, reinvents public
housing. It presents a new aging-in-place model that allows
residents to make the transition from independent to assisted
living. With two-thirds of its residents qualified for public
housing, the 75-unit development is also a model for designing,
building, and managing low-income elderly housing to serve a
population that typically lacks access to assisted living. In place
of a conventional public housing high-rise building, the
three-story courtyard-oriented building mirrors the neighborhood
fabric. With a wrap-around porch, bay windows, and plentiful
landscaping, along with a sheltering roof eave, custom brackets,
and careful brick detailing, this highly visible building has
become a neighborhood asset. Rather than institutional sterility,
the building offers residential rooms and amenities commonly
reserved for market-rate developments. The building entrance, for
example, opens into a well-furnished living room rather than an
empty lobby.
Please click here to continue.
Park Homes at
Parkside, Hillsboro, KS
InVision Architecture
Rural areas enjoy a strong sense of community. Maintaining
connection to that community is important to the residents of Park
Place at Parkside, particularly when they require nursing care. To
deinstitutionalize this elderly care campus, we wanted to provide
architectural continuity of community within a rural context. In
creating homes for residents, we began to change how
people viewed this facility--as a place where you can continue to
grow as a valuable member of the larger community, instead of one
in which you languish until the end of your life. The residential
scale is inviting to both the residents and the community; creating
households infuses a familial ambiance, blurs the distinction
between resident and staff, and enhances the creative caregiving of
the staff. The site provides natural outdoor gathering spaces
outdoors for all who live within the community. As a result, Park
Place is a contributing thread to the larger community
fabric.
Please click here to continue.
Will Rogers's advice on growing
older (from www.seniormag.com)
First: Eventually you will reach a point when you stop
lying about
your age and start bragging about it.
Second: The older we get, the fewer things seem worth
waiting in
line for.
Third: Some people try to turn back their odometers. Not
me, I want
people to know "why" I look this way. I've traveled a long way
and
some of the roads weren't paved.
Fourth: When you are dissatisfied and would like to
go back to
youth, think of Algebra.
Fifth: You know you are getting old when every thing
either dries up
or leaks.
Sixth: I don't know how I got over the hill without
getting to the top.
Seventh: One of the many things no one tells you about
aging is that
it is such a nice change from being young.
Eighth: One must wait until evening to see how splendid
the day has
been.
Ninth: Being young is beautiful, but being old is
comfortable.
Tenth: Long ago when men cursed and beat the ground with
sticks, it was called witchcraft. Today it's called golf.
And finally, If you don't learn to laugh at trouble, you won't have
anything to laugh at when you are old.
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Summer 2008
In This Issue
Letter from the Chair
Adult Day Care, An Emerging Component of At-Home Care
Aging-in-place: Universal Design is in Demand
Lessons from Disney
Silverlake Commons, Pittsburgh
Park Homes at Parkside, Hillsboro, KS
2008 Design for Aging Advisory Group
Leslie Moldow, AIA
Chair
Perkins Eastman
Oakland, Ca.
Ingrid Fraley,
ASID
Vice Chair
Design Services Inc.
Gaithersburg, Md.
Eric McRoberts, AIA
RLPS Architects
Lancaster, Penn.
Jim Warner,
FAIA
JSA Inc.
Portsmouth, N.H.
Joyce Polhamus, AIA
SmithGroup
San Francisco, Ca.
Emeritus Advisory Group Members
Mitch Green, AIA, AIJ
Hillier Architecture
New York City
Jeffrey W. Anderzhon, FAIA
JSA, Inc.
Washington, D.C.
Glen A. Tipton, FAIA
CS&D Architects
Baltimore
Design for Aging
Organizational Partner:
American Association of Homes and Services for
the Aging
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