By Randy Thoms
I am sitting here, with the
computer, watching “Garfield” with my daughter, whom is home sick today, and
thinking about school, all the deadlines and about what to blog?
So let me
express what I am planning for my graduate thesis. Could the following be called a literature
review, an abstract, a problem statement, a proposal or an introduction? Or is
it for A1, A2, A3, A4, or A5? Or Panel Z1, C1, S1, or A1? Half the time I do not know what I am writing
about or for which of the “chapters” in something that seems so far off in the
future.
Once upon a
time…sorry, I have been reading too many books for my daughter…. Let me start
over…..
The
Baby Boomers are coming…the Baby Boomers are coming! Well, coming of age. It has been 70 years since World War II, but
after the high of victory, all those men coming home (wink, wink, nudge,
nudge), and the following economic prosperity we get a boom in births in the
United States. The time period is
defined as, by Encyclopedia Britannica,
“increase in the birth rate between 1946 and 1964” (2013). With the psychology and understanding of how to handle and care for our
“growing” aging population moving forward, so too should the architecture. By using a unique set of rules and current
best practices, the following paper will examine research and benchmarks to
inform a new approach for the design of senior living housing.
One place where
this idea is accomplished, an approach to housing and community in a dense
environment, is Europe. At the age of
12, I was lucky enough to live in The Netherlands for a year with my whole
family. To this day, let me just say
over 30 years later, (yes, I am designing my retirement utopia) it still holds
as one of my ‘great awakenings’ in my life.
We lived in a flat, on the fourth floor of 12, in one of three similar
building on a one way street. My mother
biked to the grocery store, what seemed like every other day, due to the dorm size
refrigerator. I would ride my bike to
school 4 miles away and play in the canal, as well as ice skate, behind the
tower. But what this meant to us and my mom was fresh food, exercise and a
sense of community. Not only was the
mode of transportation slower, but living in a tower and walking to the
Saturday market, lead to getting out more and talking with your neighbors.
Source: http://www.library.cornell.edu/Reps/DOCS/fig84-85.gif
Therefore, going back to my own experiences, an “old world” European
village with its organic pattern of growth, and small unique enclaves begin the
discussion of a new benchmark for a senior living village. Working in concert with this pattern, is the
way buildings setback from the alleys to form streets and then plazas, opening
up the possibility of public spaces to be used by the residents whom are biking
or walking within their community. Other
ideas expressed in European towns are the many pedestrian only streets, which
allow for the walk ability to goods and services and inherit since of community
and support. Next is an impressive
public transportation system in place and utilized, so if the need arises to
travel faster and further, a well maintained and easily accessible train and
bus systems connect places far afield.
All of these impressions, which will inform a new design for senior
living, have a setting here in America.
Sounds like New Urbanism? So what
has Europe been doing all this time?
Strange, is it not?
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