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'Unassisted Living' By Wid Chapman And Jeffrey Rosenfeld Highlights Beautifully Ageless Homes

First Posted: 03/ 6/2012 5:13 am   Updated: 03/14/2012 10:15 am

If you’re considering moving, downsizing or building a home in retirement, you’ll find plenty of inspiration in the new book “Unassisted Living: Ageless Homes For Later Life” by architects Wid Chapman and Jeffrey Rosenfeld.

“Unassisted Living” feature 33 homes for baby boomers -- ranging from single-family to apartments to getaway cottages, built over the past dozen years. They vary widely in location, style, size and cost, but share an open and contemporary feel, flooded with natural light and crafted with natural materials such as wood and stone. Simultaneously minimalist and warm, these dwellings were built with both longevity and vitality in mind – but barely hint at the special accommodations typically required by age.

“Boomers have gone through life being rebels,” said Rosenfeld. “They are aware of their coming frailties, but they are thumbing their noses at some of the rules.” For instance, Rosenfeld interviewed the director of a geriatric program at a major hospital who specifically asked for stairs in his retirement home. “If anyone should know the challenges of age it would be this person, but he said, ‘How will I get exercise if I have no stairs in my home?’”

The notion of being challenged by one’s home is taken to a conceptual extreme in a project called “Bioscleave” in East Hampton, New York. Designed by Madeline Gins and Shusaku Arakawa, the home looks more like a child’s playset, with vibrant colors, floors textured like a lunar landscape and unexpected twists, turns and sloping spaces. Not even the light switches are where they’re supposed to be. Outside, the grounds are literally a maze.

Bioscleave is an example of a philosophy called “reversible destiny” –- the idea that a steady decline in faculties from midlife onward is not inevitable. “It’s all about a home that is intentionally disorienting,” said Chapman. “You need to think about finding your way through the home.”

Chapman admits there’s a “healthy element of denial" at work: "Boomers are in good health and many of them are not fully addressing these issues.” Some homeowners included shafts for future elevators and space for bathroom grab bars; one designed a pool cabana that could be converted into a caretaker’s cottage.

“No generation has ever placed such contradictory demands on later-life housing,” the authors write. In their interviews with homeowners and architects, the authors discovered three main priorities in a retirement home.

“Many people wanted to stay connected to children, grandchildren and friends; stay fit and healthy; and be involved in a combination of work and leisure pursuits,” said Rosenfeld. “I didn’t hear people say, ‘I want to leave it all behind me.’ Many were planning to continue their careers in a new form -- working from home or as a consultant or doing volunteer work related to their careers.”

In addition, post 50s want homes that balance privacy and connection -- the cozy master suite as well as flexible, separate quarters to host adult children, aging parents or visiting friends. Sustainability is another priority. “It’s the first aging population that had any social interest in green design and an understanding of climate change,” said Chapman. Homeowners put a premium on sustainable materials and energy-efficient systems.

“Boomers are transformative,” said Rosenfeld. “The life span is lengthening and the whole experience of later life is changing, and they are making an impact on how we live our later years. We wanted to celebrate that."

Check out the slideshow for seven unique homes from “Unassisted Living.”

Bistro Living
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"3 In A Row" in downtown San Diego exemplifies "bistro living" at its best. The baby boomers who live here are liberated from the maintenance of a single-family home and yard, and can walk to work and the city's prime attractions. The homes are also affordable.
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If you’re considering moving, downsizing or building a home in retirement, you’ll find plenty of inspiration in the new book “Unassisted Living: Ageless Homes For Later Life” by architects Wid...
If you’re considering moving, downsizing or building a home in retirement, you’ll find plenty of inspiration in the new book “Unassisted Living: Ageless Homes For Later Life” by architects Wid...
 
 
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02:06 PM on 03/26/2012
Laura, these photographs are beautiful and inspirational! My husband and I have recently looked at houses that work better for the two of us and not the four of us, now that our youngest is in her last phase of high school and our oldest child, in college. I am thinking of the value of steps in a house for the benefits of exercise, as your writers noted in "Unassisted Living." Thanks for bringing this book to my attention.
06:13 AM on 03/17/2012
"Unassisted Living"...an apt title for the GOP plan for your future.
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Celt Glen
03:54 PM on 03/08/2012
THESE are great ideas IF you still have;
a job
retirement
money

What % of us can afford these? Uh?

Let's talk about the majority of us who are living below 20K a year..or 10K for that matter. What ideas are there--out there-- for us?
Um?
10:23 PM on 03/07/2012
It's a beautiful book. I'm the proud owner of a copy, and I recommend it to anyone with an invested interest -- i.e., all of us born to the appropriately targeted demographic. What must be said: it's also a gorgeous "coffee table" volume, elegant, savvy and illuminating.
BrentGreenCO
Generational marketing authority, speaker, author
10:40 AM on 03/07/2012
"Unassisted Living" is more than a book title. For the Boomer generation growing older, it's also an apt metaphor and mantra. This new book continues the journey plotted in the authors' first book, "Home Design in an Aging World." Coauthor Jeff Rosenfeld spent an hour with me discussing the future of retirement and later-life housing from an international perspective. For those readers interested in additional background and insights—especially those involved in real estate, home building and community development—you can stream the interview or download the podcast: http://bit.ly/q3Y2cB.
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rivergirl301
My micro-bio is empty
11:21 PM on 03/06/2012
It absolutely boggles my mind that my parents' assisted living apartment had a shower they had to crawl over a tub to get in. And the place was built specifically for assisted living! Duh!
11:10 PM on 03/06/2012
Wonderful. I love the simplicity, light and efficiency of energy and design.
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gaydood
Denied HC? goto PCIP.gov
07:47 PM on 03/06/2012
i just want to stay in my condo and have fun
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RButler
"Who wouldn't love a person who had a pony?"
07:25 PM on 03/06/2012
When I was a kid in the 50s, I thought ultra-modern homes and furnishings were so cool.  But, now, They look cold, uncomforable, guest unfriendly  and, in an odd way, pretentious, in the way Donald Trump's gilded residences are.  Just the opposite end of the pretentious scale.
06:56 PM on 03/06/2012
The Bioscleave home is one of the most awful homes I've ever seen! A home is supposed to be comfortable, relaxing, and familiar. Building a home intentionally disorienting and a maze? Are you kidding? That's the stupidest idea for a house ever. Not to mention that this house is hidieously ugly. No doubt this awful place costs a lot of money. I bet the only reason this was built was to win some sort of architectural award.

And why are most of the houses here stark, angular, and sterile? Most people want cozy, warm homes. Not some cold, modernistic thing. And all of the too bright white walls! Experts know that aging eyes can't handle glare, yet that's what some of these interiors seem designed to do - glare right out at you.
01:41 PM on 03/07/2012
I so agree with you! I also thought Float house was incredibly ugly. All the stark angular sterile look is awful.
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Taterhead McGobstopper
Paddle faster, I hear banjos ...
06:41 PM on 03/06/2012
I wanna live in Bioscleave.
05:29 PM on 03/06/2012
Yea boomers . That's all I can say.
05:23 PM on 03/06/2012
Seems odd they all have multi-levels and I don't read about ramp access or wide doors and space to use a wheelchair or elder-safe bathrooms.........
poorwriter
Why is common sense so rare?
05:12 PM on 03/06/2012
The homes are interesting, but I'd rather have a simple, universal-design home. Right now, mother-in-law is in nursing home for rehab and set to go home next week, to a one-floor home -- with a sunken living room and bathroom and bedrooms with doorways too narrow for a wheelchair. Plus, she can't reach sinks in kitchen and bath, nor step into the bathtub.
Wish more developers would put those features into EVERY home. No one ever knows if or when they might lose mobility. Accidents happen to everyone. Hope we can retrofit her home to accommodate her needs. We live two hours away from her and, if she can't navigate her own home, there are few options other than assisted living or a nursing home.
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Kellybelle22
Happy medical wife, mom
08:05 PM on 03/06/2012
I agree with you on the accessibility features. The majority of builders take the cheapest route possible, and accessibility costs more. But it just makes bottom-line sense. More seniors could stay at home longer if homes were accessible, and everyone has accidents, illnesses, falls or surgeries occasionally and needs shower and bath facilities that allow for that. As more and more of us Boomers age, we're going to need homes built with accessibility in mind. We just completed a significant remodeling of our Dallas house, and it's accessible on the first floor for my dad, who lives with us, in case he needs that. Then after that, for us, too. I wish we had a house all on one floor, but we don't.
05:07 PM on 03/06/2012
I am Gen X, leading edge. I want a house that cleans itself while I work until I'm 75. :)

It's got to be big enough for staging all the political rallies my Boomer friends will be running when they finally retire, too.