• Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • YouTube
  • RSS
  • Sign In
  • My Account
High-Profile MonthlyThe Source for AEC Industry News
  • All News
      • Up Front
      • Groundbreaking
      • Topping Off
      • Ribbon Cutting
      • View All Up Front Stories
      • StMarysBank_NorthBranch_ToppingOffNorth Branch Construction Celebrates Topping Off for new St. Mary’s Bank Branch
      • Special Features
      • Contributor
      • Green
      • J.E.D.I.
      • Mechanical / Electrical / Plumbing (MEP)
      • Vision
      • Women In Construction
      • Regions
      • Connecticut
      • Northern New England
      • Popular Sectors
      • Cannabis
      • Corporate
      • Education
      • Healthcare
      • Interiors
      • Landscape/Civil
      • Life Science
      • Multi Residential
      • Restoration/Renovation
      • Retail/Hospitality
      • Senior/Assisted Living
      • Technology & Innovation
      • Other News
      • Awards
      • Community
      • COVID-19
      • Mixed-use
      • Municipal
      • National/International
      • Organizations and Events
      • People
      • Philanthropy
      • Products and Services
      • Real Estate
      • Training and Recruitment
  • Subscribe
  • Next Issue
  • Archive
  • Advertise
  • Podcast
  • A/E/C Associations
  • Calendar
High-Profile Monthly
  • All News
      • Up Front
      • Groundbreaking
      • Topping Off
      • Ribbon Cutting
      • View All Up Front Stories
      • StMarysBank_NorthBranch_ToppingOffNorth Branch Construction Celebrates Topping Off for new St. Mary’s Bank Branch
      • Special Features
      • Contributor
      • Green
      • J.E.D.I.
      • Mechanical / Electrical / Plumbing (MEP)
      • Vision
      • Women In Construction
      • Regions
      • Connecticut
      • Northern New England
      • Popular Sectors
      • Cannabis
      • Corporate
      • Education
      • Healthcare
      • Interiors
      • Landscape/Civil
      • Life Science
      • Multi Residential
      • Restoration/Renovation
      • Retail/Hospitality
      • Senior/Assisted Living
      • Technology & Innovation
      • Other News
      • Awards
      • Community
      • COVID-19
      • Mixed-use
      • Municipal
      • National/International
      • Organizations and Events
      • People
      • Philanthropy
      • Products and Services
      • Real Estate
      • Training and Recruitment
  • Subscribe
  • Next Issue
  • Archive
  • Advertise
  • Podcast
  • A/E/C Associations
  • Calendar
Contributor

Senior Housing Design for How We Want to Live: Is it Possible?

February 25, 2021

by Brent Maugel

My wife recently recommended that I watch “The Impossible,” a film based on a true story of survival during the devastating 2004 tsunami in Thailand. My first thought in the midst of a pandemic was, why? But as is typically the case, she was right. The movie was a rich and inspiring story that brings with it hope and confidence that anything is possible. It leaves us asking ourselves: Why could they not have foreseen the tsunami and prepared for it?

It made me question what blind spots exist in the real estate industry: What do we know is coming, but are not preparing for adequately?

We have heard the looming statistics: The aging of the American population is increasing at an alarming rate. In 20 years, one in five Americans will be over 65 years of age and that number will more than double over the next 40 years. Of the over 65 age group, 15% will be over 85 years of age and is projected to nearly quadruple in the next 20 years. The unprecedented need for senior housing is coming; the question is whether we can provide enough safe, affordable, comfortable and care-appropriate options before the wave hits the shore.

As planners and designers, there are some steps we can do to prepare. First, we must acknowledge that what has come before and what is in place now is unsustainable. The pandemic has opened our eyes to the health issues inherent in nursing homes and elderly congregate living facilities. This does not mean they should be abandoned, but it does mean they must be re-imagined, re-designed, and re-born as safe and desirable homes for the aged.

My mother is 96 years old and by the grace of God is living in her own home in the farmlands of Northwest Ohio. She is superbly cared for by my saintly sister and her husband who live next door. This arrangement is a rarity because of the transient nature of younger generations. Realistically, generational housing – while often best for the person needing care – is not always best for the caregiver and should not be considered a broad-brush solution. There are, however, some innovative alternatives for elder care housing that can provide significant pieces of the senior housing puzzle.

Private Collaboratives

Private collaborative homes, though rare in America, are rather popular in European communities due to their affordability, intimate scale, and social connectiveness with multiple generations. Affordability is found in right-sized rooms; shared kitchens, amenity spaces, and expenses; and small management and health care staffs. Often a few dwelling units are rented to younger families with children who provide the companionship and social interaction important to combating loneliness in seniors. The more intimate scale of 8 to 12 seniors also provides an added level of protection from future health crises.

Senior Living Re-imagined

We – the individuals; families; healthcare community; federal, state, and local governments; planners and designers – must create a new response to senior living that combines skilled nursing, independent living and assisted living in built environments that are indeed communities that feel like home, at whatever level of care is required. Today, living in a nursing home is a frightful situation due to insufficient safety and health care protocols brought to light in the pandemic. Going forward, we expect the senior care industry will undergo a government-sponsored overhaul of building standards, including institution of hospital quality heating, ventilation and air-conditioning systems.

Unlike Thailand in 2004, we know right now in America what is on the horizon for the housing and health care needs of our seniors. Let us remember “The Impossible” story and have hope and confidence that anything is possible, including preparing for seniors to enjoy social interaction, homelike comfort and dignified care in the senior housing options of the future. We’ll all be there soon enough, let’s make it a place we can be proud of.

Brent Maugel

Brent Maugel

Brent Maugel, AIA is president of Maugel Architects.

 

HPNews seniorhousing
    FacebookXLinkedInEmail

You may also like

Contributor

Ask the Electrician: What are the...

January 8, 2025
Contributor

What’s Next for Construction in...

December 30, 2024
Contributor

Strengthening the AEC Community: A...

December 27, 2024
Contributor

Boston’s Commercial Real...

December 26, 2024
Contributor

Choosing a B2B PR Agency: Why it...

December 19, 2024
Contributor

A/Z’s 2025 Strategic Growth...

December 18, 2024
Contributor • Green

BERDO: From Boston to your Backyard

December 2, 2024
Contributor • Green

Decarbonizing Healthcare:...

November 27, 2024
  • Gray.png
  • Pedigree.png
  • PWC.png
  • INterstate.png

HIGH-PROFILE MONTHLY
615 School St.
Pembroke, MA  02359
Phone: 781 294 4530
Fax:  781 293 5821
info@high-profile.com

Quick Links

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • My Account

Stay Informed

Sign up for Fast Facts Friday, our weekly e-newsletter, and stay up-to-date with the latest industry news!

Sign up
Subscribe to High-Profile Monthly to receive an email notice of each new article!
Loading

Copyright © 2026 High-Profile Monthly.

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • YouTube
  • RSS
  • Sign In
  • My Account