Casos de Referência Internacionais mais Específicos e aplicáveis à Habitação Intergeracional: Parte II – infohabitar # 977
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Infohabitar, ano XXII, n.º 977
Edição:
quarta-feira 20 de Maio de 2026
Editorial
Caros
amigos e leitores da Infohabitar,
Continuamos
a desenvolver a divulgação de aspetos ligados a casos considerados de
referência ligados ao estudo teórico-prático do PHAI3C - Programa de
Habitação Adaptável Intergeracional Cooperativa a Custos Controlado, agora
referido, frequentemente, como “uma nova forma de habitar adaptável,
intergeracional, equipada e participada”.
Continuamos,
portanto, neste artigo, com a divulgação de casos de referência, neste caso
especificamente ligados à matéria da intergeracionalidade, internacionais e
considerados mais específicos de determinadas matérias e/ou objetivos de
intervenção.
Na
medida do possível iremos dar prioridade à conclusão da divulgação comentada
dos casos de referência aplicáveis à habitação intergeracional, equipada e
participada, para depois passarmos aos artigos finais do estudo e série
editorial.
Boas
leituras e naturalmente seria muito bom poder ter contribuições vossas nesta
matéria intergeracional, seja a título de sugestões, seja mesmo como artigos
propostos para publicação e eventualmente na sequência da leitura dos artigos
agora em publicação e que tratam de aspetos bem urgentes e críticos em Portugal.
Saudações
cordiais,
António
Baptista Coelho
Editor
da infohabitar
20
de maio de 2026
Casos de Referência Internacionais mais Específicos
e aplicáveis à Habitação Intergeracional: Parte II – infohabitar # 977
1. Introdução ao perfil de análise e apresentação dos Casos de
Referência ligados a habitação intergeracional, estudados no âmbito do
PHAI3C
Os casos de referência
que são em seguida apresentados estão marcados por um perfil de apresentação muito
prático que desde já se sintetiza:
. Os textos
realizados têm um perfil claramente "de trabalho"; foram,
naturalmente, revisto, mas são assumidos como fases de procura prática de
elementos para informação dos artigos de síntese.
. Os textos
realizados correspondem apenas à opinião do autor e são muito influenciados
pela sua respetiva formação arquitectónica e habitacional.
. Os textos
realizados são, quase sempre, baseados apenas no estudo de documentos
identificados na WWW; quando tenha havido visita essa
condição é devidamente sublinhada no início dos mesmos.
. Os textos
realizados correspondem ao “respigar” de aspetos considerados úteis ou
oportunos no sentido do apoio ao desenvolvimento de soluções a desenvolver no
âmbito do PHAI3C; não constituem, portanto, qualquer
tipo de análise dos respetivos casos relativamente aos seus objetivos
residenciais e/ou de equipamento específicos.
Por razões práticas e
de agilização da apresentação não se usam
imagens originais; podendo ser realizados esquemas ilustrativos e
descrições sintéticas de espaços e equipamentos.
Os textos em
itálico correspondem a muito frequentes citações retiradas dos muitos documentos
usados; mas estes não se encontram extensamente referenciados, por razões
ligadas à grande quantidade de informação tratada; salientando-se, sempre, o
carácter “de trabalho” e de apoio do presente documento, onde se pretendeu
alertar para essas essenciais fontes e delas retirar desde já elementos
práticos de apoio à conclusão do presente estudo.
E por fim mas
considerando-se que é matéria estruturante, convidam-se os leitores a
procurarem aceder, na WWW e por outros meios, aos diversos e fundamentais
aspetos de cada caso de referência considerado e a daí retirarem as vossas
respetivas conclusões e aspetos de reflexão, que são, sem dúvida, essenciais.
2.
Listagem geral ordenada dos mais de 100 Casos de Referência ligados a habitação
intergeracional e estudados no âmbito do PHAI3C
A estruturação geral dos
casos de referência considerados no estudo seguiu essencialmente o seu perfil
tipológico e de localização, que aqui, novamente, se resume:
Ibéricos e
sul-americanos – correntes 11 casos
Ibéricos e
sul-americanos – Intergeracionais 7 casos
Internacionais –
Correntes ou mais Específicos 60 casos
Internacionais –
Intergeracionais 13 casos
Internacionais -
Específicos para demências 7 casos
Internacionais -
Envelhecer na sua casa 5 casos
3. identificação dos “Casos de
Referência ligados
a Habitação Intergeracional, internacionais e mais específicos” – 25 casos –
apresentados no presente artigo (ordem cronológica de desenvolvimento)
A seguinte apresentação dos títulos dos
casos, depois comentados individualmente de forma sintética, destina-se a
podermos ficar com uma ideia geral da matéria, que não pode deixar bastante
diversificada quando pretendemos visar uma nova categoria de tipificação
habitacional e urbana, pois em cada caso/situação podemos retirar aspetos
significativos e cada caso pode ser, aparentemente, pequeno nos seus aspetos
aqui respigados mas até, eventualmente, muito significativo na sua influência
no corpo final de sugestões sobre uma renovada forma de habitar
intergeracional, adaptável, variadamente apoiada, naturalmente convivial e
participada.
Tendo-se em conta a extensão dos casos
apurados o presente artigo é editado em duas partes; em seguida e a negrito
apontam-se os casos abordados no presente artigo; salienta-se, ainda, a
relativa informalidade da apresentação (iniciando-se nas próprias referências
aos casos, que não foram uniformizadas) e das abordagens em seguida realizadas,
associadas a uma matéria muito extensa e à natureza do presente
artigo/documento que se quer que seja “de trabalho” e de apontamento de casos,
que, sequencialmente, o leitor poderá procurar e aprofundar, facilmente, na
WWW, designadamente, no que se refere à respetiva e importante ilustração.
1. 2018 Levensloopbestendige
(Apartments for Life) in The Netherlands
2.
2018 Habitação
para a aposentação + – McCarthy & Stone
3.
2018
Casos de projecto do PRP UKI
4. 2017 Quality designs for later life housing: Highs
and lows – cottage HAPPIness
5. 2017 AV
6. 2016 Woodchester Valley
Village
7. 2016 Casos Orchard Cove
8. 2016 Accessing shared
ownership for people with disabilities in Wales: An overview of using the HOLD
scheme
9. 2016 Independent Living
with Care
10. 2016 Architectural
Competitions for Care and Caregiving
11. 2015 Maggie Centers
12. 2015 Logévie
13. 2015 Case study report
14. 2014 Hazel Court
15. 2013 DFAR12 Insights and Innovations
16. 2013 The Design
Perspective: HAPPI principles in later life
17. 2013 Assisted Living
Platform - The Long Term Care Revolution: A study of innovatory models to
support older people with disabilities in the Netherlands
18. 2012 Vários Maggie Centers
19. 2011 Casos – Le Port, La
Réunion
20. 2010 Senior Forum: A whole concept
21. 2010 Elderly Housing Design
in Charlton
22. 2009 Homes for our old age
Independent living by design CABE
23. 2006 Design and
neighbourhood healthcare buildings CABE
24. 2005 A collection of case
studies demonstrating exemplar ‘sustainable community
25. 2001 ICA Housing
Co-operatives Habitat II
26. 1974 De Drie Hoven elderly
housing, Amsterdam
Chama-se ainda e novamente a atenção para o
cariz esquemático e “de trabalho” dos referidos comentários, referidos,
portanto, a uma fase preliminar de sugestões conclusivas para uma “nova”
tipologia residencial baseada em espaços privados, comuns e de uso público.
E finalmente avisam-se os leitores para a
diversidade de extensão das referências a cada caso de estudo e para o
frequente recurso a citações retiradas dos respetivos documentos consultados
essencialmente na WWW – e indicadas a itálico. Os destaques a negrito são nossos e
em cada caso de referência optou-se pela estruturação de texto julgada mais
adequada à respetiva leitura – por exemplo com sínteses de itens, ou com textos
alternados por citações e comentários.
4. Apresentação ordenada e sintética de aspetos apurados na análise do conjunto de casos referência intitulado “Casos de Referência ligados a Habitação Intergeracional, internacionais e mais específicos” de uma dada temática e/ou de um dado conjunto de objetivos
... os itens 4.1 a 4.11 foram editados na passada semana
4.12. - 2015 - Logévie, Spécialiste de l´Habitat pours
Seniors
Fontes principais
http://famille.logevie.fr/contenu/,nos_missions,6
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a consulta direta do documento.
En 2050, un habitant sur trois en France aura plus
de 60 ans et pourra être confronté à la baisse de ses revenus..
… Logévie a notamment construit 84 établissements,
situés presque tous en Gironde, qui regroupent 4000 personnes âgées.
A partir de 2005, l'Entreprise Sociale pour l'Habitat s'est spécialisée
dans l'intergénérationnel.
Aujourd'hui, Logévie couvre deux types d'habitat
pour seniors :
- elle favorise le maintien à domicile des seniors dans des logements sociaux -
classiques, adaptés ou intergénérationnels.
- elle propose des établissements avec services pour seniors, de type EHPA
(Etablissement d'Hébergement pour Personnes Agées), gérés en partenariat avec
les CCAS des communes.
- Logévie construit également des EHPAD
(Etablissement d'Hébergement pour Personnes Agées Dépendantes) pour le compte
de gestionnaires agissant sans but lucratif : associations, fondations ou
collectivités locales.
Etablissements avec services
pour seniors
Répartis dans 30 établissements avec services de type EHPA, Logévie propose
plus de 1500 logements pour personnes âgées autonomes.
Conçus pour accueillir des résidents de plus de 60 ans, ces logements garantissent
une "indépendance" de vie comme celle du domicile classique, dans un
cadre sécurisé.
Des services à la personne sont mises à la
disposition des résidents par les CCAS : restauration, gardiennage, entretien,
animations...
Concert'O
… Depuis
2015, Concert'O, première résidence intergénérationnelle thématique en France
et en Europe, réunit des locataires autour de la musique, avec trois espaces
dédiés.
Logévie a confié à l'association Ricochet Sonore le
soin d'accompagner les résidents de Concert'O. Cette structure spécialisée dans
la consrtuction de projets de cohésion sociale et d'accès à la culture autour
de la musique propose différentes animations : quiz musical, découvertes
sonores, karaoké décalé...
Généralement situés au sein des résidences intergénérationnelles, les logements adaptés sont conçus pour favoriser le maintien à domicile.
Selon les résidences, ils bénéficient d'équipements qui facilitent la vie
quotidienne : douche de plain-pied, volets roulants électriques, parcours
lumineux entre la chambre et le WC... A l’extérieur, les cheminements entre le
bâtiment et la rue sont étudiés pour des déplacements aisés et sécurisés. La
résidence, proche des commerces et services, comprend également des espaces
communs de rencontres et d’échanges.
Résidences Autonomie
A la campagne ou en ville, les établissements avec
services pour seniors de Logévie sont destinés aux personnes de plus de 60 ans.
Vous disposez soit d’un appartement, soit d’un pavillon. La liberté,
c’est le maître mot de ce concept d’habitat qui respecte votre vie privée et
votre intimité. Vous pouvez profiter également à votre guise des espaces de
convivialité dans lesquels sont proposés des animations et des services à la
carte par les CCAS des communes…
… Un budget modéré
440 euros par mois de redevance comprenant:
- Le loyer
- Le chauffage
- L’eau
- L’entretien de la résidence
… Vous trouverez à moins de 100 mètres :
- des services de proximité : gendarmerie…
- des transports en commun …
… Un vrai logement fonctionnel…
…de plain-pied que vous décorez à votre goût, en
aménageant avec vos meubles
T1 bis comprenant:
- Une cuisine séparée
- Un espace de vie
- Une salle d’eau avec WC
- Un cellier
… Sérénité:
Présence du personnel du CCAS … (Centre Communale d’action sociale) 5 jours
sur 7
… Un service de:
- restauration dans le foyer à midi du lundi au
vendredi
- possibilité de portage des repas à domicile
Des animations ont lieu toutes les semaines ou de
façon ponctuelle:
- Gymnastique
- Ateliers créatifs (jardinage, cuisine…)
- Evénements : (sorties, anniversaire, noël,
semaine bleue)
- Pétanque
- Association du troisième âge
…
En 2005, Logévie livre sa première résidence
intergénérationnelle.
Une petite révolution dans le monde du logement. Il s'agit de regrouper au sein
d'une même résidence des seniors autonomes et des personnes actives, favorisant
ainsi les occasions de rencontres entre elles.
Concrètement, le rez-de-chausée de ces résidences a été conçu et adapté
pour les seniors alors que le premier étage est attribué à des locataires
seuls, en couple ou en famille.
Des critères très étudiés
Les projets intergénérationnels répondent à des critères bien prévis.
- Le premier porte sur l'implantation géographique de la résidence. Celle-ci
doit, idéalement, se situer près d'un centre-bourg ou à proximité des commerces
et des services.
- Le second concerne la dimension de la résidence, de petite taille de
préférence, pour faciliter les liens de voisinage.
- Enfin, l'architecture de ces résidences a été pensée pour faciliter au
maximum les lieux de rencontre, tout en respectant l'intimité de chacun.
… L'intergénérationnel, nouvelle génération
En 2015, Logévie va plus loin et livre à Bordeaux sur les Bassins à flot sa
première résidence intergénérationnelle thématique, Concert'O.
Dédiée à la musique, cette résidence d'un nouveau genre propose 52 logements
dont 24 pour les seniors, et 3 salles de musique.
… Le Hameau de la Bassane est une résidence
intergénérationnelle de 13 logements répondant aux besoins des seniors
comme des familles. Cette résidence, construite en 2010, accueille des seniors
au sein de logements adaptés ainsi que des locataires plus jeunes, dont des
familles, dans des logements traditionnels…
Zoom sur les logements seniors
4 logements adaptés aux seniors
– T2 de 52 m²
– Loyer moyen : environ 355 euros – charges comprises
– Habilités à l’aide sociale au logement
Des logements adaptés pour le maintien à domicile
L’organisation des pièces a été spécifiquement
pensée afin de faciliter et sécuriser les déplacements. De même, les
équipements ont été étudiés dans le détail afin de faciliter les gestes de la
vie quotidienne. Le logement offre ainsi un niveau de sécurité renforcé, de
jour comme de nuit
… Favoriser le maintien à domicile des seniors
en les aidant à conserver leur autonomie ne se limite pas à proposer un habitat
adapté. Les parties communes et les abords de la résidence sont aménagés
pour réduire les obstacles et les risques de chute, les espaces extérieurs
favorisent les échanges entre générations et les commerces et les services sont
à proximité immédiate…
Uma proximidade indicada até 500m.
4.13.
- 2015 - Case study report MIII 2015
Fontes diretas e autorias:
Getting HAPPI - A review of the winning 2015
design awards
Written for the Housing Learning and Improvement
Network by David Birkbeck and Lubaina Mirza, Design for Homes
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a consulta direta do documento.
However you try to sweeten the message, the 2009
HAPPI report1 warned that most people with choice would choose not to move
to the homes targeted at them. Beyond the default to small inflexible flats
with a lack of storage, developments needed to move on from tired communal
amenity and provide facilities for meals and recreation of the kind the
“boomers” would expect as they began to retire.
Atenção: o que acabou de ser referido e sublinhado é muito importante se quisermos que as
intervenções do PHAI3C sejam realmente desejadas!
The 10 key HAPPI design
principles:
- Generous internal space standards•
- Plenty of natural light in the home and in circulation spaces•
- Balconies and outdoor space, avoiding
internal corridors and single-aspect flats
- Adaptability and ‘care aware’ design
which is ready for • emerging telecare and telehealthcare technologies
- Circulation spaces that encourage
interaction and avoid an • ‘institutional feel’
- Shared facilities and community ‘hubs’
where these are lacking • in the neighbourhood
- Plants, trees, and the natural environment
- High levels of energy efficiency, with
good ventilation to avoid overheating
- Extra storage for belongings and
bicycles•
- Shared external areas such as ‘home zones’
that give priority to pedestrians
O que acabou de ser referido deve ser transposto para as conclusões
práticas dos conjuntos PHAI3C.
The focus of each scheme is
on how buildings present themselves as bright additions to the general housing
stock rather than how they function as secure and sealed apartment buildings. Though they are all designed to function for the HAPPI generation,
the design emphasis is on the approach to home rather than age group.
In denser neighbourhoods, ‘senior living’ is
going highrise, with landscaped podium gardens providing secure communal
amenity…
… We’ve moved on from the clichés of ‘age appropriate’ and care-dependant
retirement housing, and there is a bold new freshness to the lifestyle concepts
driving architecture and support services – whether in historic towns or inner
city neighbourhoods.
People of all ages expect new homes to be stylish, convenient and
efficient; marrying spacious and adaptable layouts with good light and
ventilation, and opportunities for walking, shopping, a thriving social life,
and enjoyment of the outdoors…
… At the time of writing, the influential All
Party Parliamentary Group on Housing and Care for Older People chaired by Lord
Best has established a new inquiry, ‘HAPPI3:
Making Retirement Living A Positive Choice’. Due to report in May 2016,
HAPPI3 is seeking out examples of best and innovative practice, exploring
different service options and advocating for improvement in standards and
practice in the management of retirement properties.
References/Useful
publications
Wood C (2013) Top of the Ladder, DEMOS
Best R and Porteus J (2012) Housing our Ageing
Population: Plan for Implementation (HAPPI 2), APPG Housing and Care for Older
People
Housing Design Awards website: www.hdawards.org
Homes and Communities Agency (2009) Housing our
Ageing Population: Panel for Innovation. HCA
Housing LIN ‘Design Hub’ HAPPI webpages:
www.housinglin.org.uk/Topics/browse/Design_building/HAPPI
Mansfield L et al (2014) Converting to HAPPI at
St. Bede’s, Bedford, Housing Learning and Improvement Case Study No.100. Housing LIN
Julga-se que mais do que algo muito novo é
agarrar no que de melhor se fez em HCC entre nós, rever os dados de projecto
específicos, privilegiando tipologias mais pequenas e diversificadas, e juntar
serviços comuns; considerando um leque tipológico reduzido mas essencial e
estimulante.
4.14.
- 2014 - Hazel Court
Fontes diretas e autoria:
HLIN Case Study CS 95
Ensuring Extra Care is Part of the Community, not a Community Apart
Written for the Housing Learning &
Improvement Network (HLIN) by
Barry Miles, Older Person Services’ Manager, and
Pamela Williams, Community Activity Coordinator, at Family Housing Association (Wales
Ltd)
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a consulta direta do documento.
… has over 160 tenants
living in 120 apartments set over three
blocks [cerca
de 40 cada], with the highest block covering four floors.
This includes one apartment utilised by Social
Services for respite, with another offering specialist care and support to
three ladies with mental health support needs.
A further 43 apartments will be built on the
north of the site with the addition of a second guest suite.
Notar o agrupamento por conjuntos de cerca de 40 unidades.
… The scheme has a wide range of communal
facilities, all available for hire, which are widely used by both tenants and
the wider community. These include:
- Gym Therapy Room
- Exercise Room
- Community Hall
- Training / Meeting Room
- Craft and Hobbies Room
- Library / IT Suite
- Restaurant
- Shop
- Hairdressing Salon
- Laundry
- Fully-fitted Assisted Bathroom
Parece muito importante que os espaços comuns
sejam realmente à escala da intervenção – por exemplo no caso do conjunto para
mulheres idosas que foi atrás abordado, os espaços comuns correspondem a um
fogo sem ser dos maiores (num conjunto de 25 fogos) -; é importante também a
questão da multifuncionalidade espacial (ex., espaços de exercício serem também
de reuniões e quem sabe mesmo a garagem poder servir para festas alargadas,
desde que a garagem seja bem planeada em termos luz natural por exemplo).
On-site staff employed by
Family Housing provide a range of services, including:
- Domiciliary care
- Tenancy support
- Estates / grounds maintenance services
- Communal cleaning service
- Handy person service
- Personal cleaning service
- Reception and administration service
- Scheme management
Key Learning Points
- The benefits from having a Community
Activities Co-ordinator have proved invaluable.
- Appreciating all stakeholder groups as
partners is vital to ownership of the development by both tenants and the local
community.
- Interior design - ensuring the scheme lent
itself to engaging with the local community but also felt safe and secure for
tenants.
- Regular partnership meetings ensured Hazel
Court fulfilled its promise to become a key communal facility in the area.
- Develop a partnership approach with tenants at
an early stage (cooperativa)
4.15.
- 2013 - DFAR12 Insights and Innovations
Havendo, por exemplo, (i) um Prémio de ideias
e (ii) outro de fogos adaptáveis de baixa tipologia; (iii) haver também um
outro de soluções existentes para habitação de idosos humanizadas e inovadoras
– julga-se que desta forma seria possível localizar e retirar muitas boas ideias
e identificar os principais bloqueios e problemas – sendo a avaliação feita de
forma prática e fundamentada.
Fontes e principal autoria:
Emily Chmielewski, Perkins Eastman Research Collaborative
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a consulta direta do documento.
In the summer of 2013, the
American Institute of Architect’s Design for Aging Knowledge Community (DFA)
conducted its 12th biennial Design for Aging Review design competition
(DFAR12). In total, there were 64 submissions, 34 of which were recognized by the
jury for an award or publication. Eleven projects received an award of merit; 7
projects were given a citation award; and 16 projects were recognized for
publication within this book.
… Using Research in the Design Process
… Of those that conducted research (formally or
informally) during the design process: 89%
incorporated building occupant feedback, from existing and / or prospective
users; 22% created 3D views or computer models to better explore the
proposed design; 22% made observations
of existing spaces to understand operational issues and / or building users’
needs, desires, and expectations; 19% made use of existing data (i.e.,
post-occupancy evaluation findings or benchmark data); 7% built full-scale mock-ups so that design details and actual
layout could be assessed prior to construction; 4% performed sun-angle computer modeling to better
understand how daylight could permeate the building; and 4% piloted a built
environment by building a case study setting and allowing it to function, while
recording associated outcomes to inform the final design and replication of the
setting. In Their Own Words.
Trata-se de matéria que se considera generalizável e fundamental nesta
temática.
Em seguida apontam-se alguns aspetos relativos a soluções específicas e
registadas.
Moorings Park
“A digital virtual tour was created in great
detail during the design process, not after, to further vet the design and
provide the design team, stakeholders, residents, and operational management a
clear picture of the space qualities … [The] clinic exam room was mocked-up
full scale and then revised upon user input from physician and nurses.”
Rose Villa Pocket Neighborhoods & Main
Street
“The design team conducted 5 separate focus
groups comprised of senior management, staff members, independent living
residents, adult children of residents, and family members.
Each group responded to a series of open-ended
questions regarding existing facilities and programs, as well as potential
areas of improvement.”
Collaborative Designing
… Of those projects that
used a collaborative process, 92% incorporated feedback from existing and / or
prospective building occupants. Forty-two percent worked with the client /
owner’s senior management team during the design process. Nineteen percent tapped
into the expertise of another organization, ...
Laclede Groves
“The
project commenced with [a] strategic planning workshop that was structured to
help the client determine strategic ways to develop new opportunities and to
create, reposition, and reinvent existing services and environments for seniors.
Meetings engaged executive teams, board members, and key staff in a process
that integrates forward-thinking design, thoughtful economic analysis, and
thorough market assessment to create sustainable strategies.”
Rydal Park Repositioning
Designing was an “interactive team process
involving all stakeholders including administration, architect, development
consultant, staff, selected residents, resident committees, and zoning and code
officials.”
Orchard Cove
“Specifically focused resident committees were
formulated by the Orchard Cove administration with the sole purpose of getting
[the] participation of respected individuals who had been acknowledged as fair
and well informed people, best suited to represent the community in their
respective areas of expertise.
The committees included: library, dining,
acoustics, fitness / wellness, interior design, and artwork…”
Good Shepherd Cottage, Santa Teresita, Inc.
“The building provides a vibrant and engaging
lifestyle by focusing on direct access to social areas that have abundant
natural light and multiple connections to the outdoors … The patios and
outdoor gardens on the first floor become places for residents to interact. The
second floor has accessible common decks with view of the San Gabriel
Mountains.”…
White Oak Cottages at Fox Hill Village
“Natural light is always important in any
residential project, but takes on a higher level of importance for those with
dementia and Alzheimer’s, and is often a struggle on projects employing the
Green House® and small house models because of the relatively high ratio of
resident rooms to commons…
Contemporary vs.
Traditional Interior Aesthetics: What “Home” Looks Like Today
It is now just as common to find a senior living
community with a contemporary interior aesthetic, as opposed to a traditional
setting, which was the standard not too long ago. Fifty-six percent of the
jury-recognized DFAR12 projects were classified as having a contemporary
interior aesthetic; 44% had a traditional interior aesthetic.
A contemporary interior aesthetic may be
recognized by such features as clean lines, geometric patterns, and minimal
details. A traditional interior aesthetic, on the other hand, is more likely to
include crown and base molding, rolled arm furniture, pleated curtains, and
more ornate details and patterns…
Household Model and Person-Centered Care
Because building occupants’ mental, social,
emotional, and physical wellbeing— and, therefore, quality of life—are affected
by operational and design decisions, it is important to provide person-centered
care and create physical environments that empower people… Fifty percent of the
jury-recognized DFAR12 submissions described a physical environment that
supports person-centered care and / or includes a Household in the project…
Based on plan analysis, 11 of the
jury-recognized DFAR12 submissions include
a Household, typically defined as … private residential bedrooms organized around
a shared living / dining / kitchen area. Five additional projects were
classified as “Neighborhoods,” where 2–3
groups of eight to 8–12 private residential bedrooms are organized around a
shared living / dining / kitchen area.
In terms of the size of the Households, … The overall average* square footage per
resident was 763 [71m2], with a range* of 484–996 square feet per person.
… Several DFAR12 projects, like The Deupree House and Nursing Cottages,
are reworking the layout of the Household for a better hierarchy of
public-to-private spaces. Bedrooms no longer open into common areas, like
living or dining rooms.
Mas a própria hierarquização está em
discussão e haverá quem prefira uma relação mais direta entre o seu mundo e o
comum, o que poderá ser conseguido de modo “matizado” (protegido) por exemplo
através de diferentes níveis e posições das entradas dos fogos relativamente a
diversos tipos de espaços comuns – imagina-se por exemplo o que poderá ser uma
posição de alguns acessos a fogos em 1.º andar sobre zona com duplo pé direito
sobre zona comum.
… Eighty-two percent of jury-recognized DFAR12 projects described
spaces where learning, meetings, activities, and hobbies occur. These
learning / activity spaces included: large multi-purpose rooms, dedicated
conference / meeting spaces, library / information resource centers, art
studios / craft rooms, dedicated classroom / learning spaces; religious /
spiritual / meditative spaces; and small-scale cinema / media rooms. Several projects also described
Household-like community / activity spaces.
A existência de espaços para atividades
comuns “específicas” e não “apenas comuns” parece ser muito importante – ainda
que multifuncionais e multiusáveis por exemplo pela vizinhança (através de
parcerias específicas)
Sixty-five percent of jury-recognized DFAR12
projects described fitness / wellness amenities, including: dedicated fitness equipment rooms, dedicated exercise classrooms, dedicated
rehab / therapy gyms, swimming pools / aquatics facilities, salons, and
massage / aromatherapy rooms.
… Two projects stood out for the innovative way
they are delivering services to
the greater community:
- “The cafes serve as neighborhood based administrative outposts as well
as senior services centers. Along with the social component of the cafe, the
senior services provided include computer classes, medical assistance,
financial counseling, and exercise classes.”
The cafes encourage healthy eating,
socialization, and are a place to find support so that people who are
aging-in-place can remain in their homes.
Marian’s House is a guesthouse for people with
dementia who are living at home with a caregiver. The building is embedded in
an existing residential neighborhood and looks like any other house along the
street. However, it offers a dementia day center, an on-site caregiver’s suite,
and several bedrooms that allow for respite care (or, when not in use for
overnight stays by people with dementia, can act as guest bedrooms for the
caregiver’s suite).
In addition to allowing for one-on-one
interaction and specialized group activities, the spaces in Marian’s House also double as an
after-hours resource center, providing training and support for family
caregivers.
… When senior living projects provide spaces that
encourage residents to leave their private homes and interact with others, it
encourages relationships to form and promotes a sense of community. Social interactions among residents help
minimize isolation, improve quality of life, and even foster a sense of
security as residents look out for each other. In fact, research has shown that social activities
and productive engagement are as influential to elder survival as physical
fitness activities.
A sense of community is promoted by common
spaces that encourage socialization—both informal / spontaneous social
interaction spaces (e.g., residents running into each other in the lobby or at
the mailboxes), as well as formal / planned social interaction spaces (e.g.,
the interactions that occur in an activity room or theater). Also described
were communal dining venues, wide hallways with places to sit and chat, spaces
that encourage and support visitors, and providing a circulation system that
promotes socialization, with short walking distances and ease of access to
common areas to encourage use.
… To help residents hear one another in the
cafes “the acoustic environment was improved to eliminate the echoes and
background noise that dominates the larger regional centers.” In addition to providing good acoustics
that allow for conversations, “a variety of seating options were included on
the periphery for those preferring to talk with staff at the lunch counters or
observe from a distance,” thereby recognizing people’s varying needs for
interaction versus privacy outside one’s home.
Rose Villa Pocket Neighborhoods & Main
Street
“Creating a smaller ‘community within a
community’ resulted in the introduction of pocket neighborhoods. Each pocket
neighborhood consists of 7 cottage homes organized around an intimate garden
setting that promotes a close-knit sense of community and neighborliness
through an increased level of contact.
Flexibility
Twenty-one percent of the jury-recognized DFAR12
projects described ways in which their submission incorporated built-in
flexibility—a new theme (not seen to a great extent in the analysis for
DFAR11).
Projects described how they were designed to:
support aging-in-place, with features such as extra wall blocking in shower
areas for future grab bar installation; accommodate different levels of care in
one setting for if / when the market shifts (e.g., switching from Assisted
Living to Skilled Nursing); allow for an easy remodel that would combine two
smaller residential units into one larger unit, or to have one larger unit
split into two smaller units to address market demand; offer flexible commons spaces
that serve different users / purposes depending on the time of day and on the
program / building occupants’ needs; and consider the future expansion of the
project, minimizing the need for moving or replacing major equipment and / or
systems.
… Taking the idea of flexibility to a new level, Moorings Park offers
Independent Living apartments that “were designed to be completely customized
by the owner—essentially blank slates to be configured and finished to suit the
resident’s lifestyle.” Apartments can be personalized to accommodate such features as a large space for entertaining guests, or a high-end kitchen
for cooking. An artist can devote
floor area to a studio; an athlete can have
space for exercising. Many options abound and residents are able to “work backwards from their price point,
matching lifestyle and entrance fee with
square footage and interior design choices.”
Matéria muito importante para idosos e para
jovens
Asbury Place at Arbor Acres
The project built in “flexibility so that the
two-bedroom units could be converted into a studio and one-bedroom unit in the
future if needed.”
Marian’s House
- “Some [of the] daycare spaces are designed [to] double as an evening
resource center for classes and discussion groups. Media and technology have
been integrated for participant use and for evening presentations and training
videos / presentations.
- There is [also] flexibility of use with two respite bedrooms, which
can be open to either the caregiver as private guest rooms or open to the
daycare portion of the home when residents stay over.”
The Mather
“We have unique ‘flex’ spaces that can be
sub-divided—using moveable glass partitions with curtains or large sliding
doors—to serve as meeting venues, private dining rooms or the location of a
bridge tournament or a game of Mahjong.”
4.16. - 2013 - The Design Perspective: HAPPI
principles in later life
Fontes diretas e autorias:
Visitas HAPPI october-wg1-prp-design.pdf
Jenny Buterchi, Coordenação
Salienta-se que este documento tem um
carácter muito prático, está bem ilustrado e é considerado de grande
importância para consultas eventuais Estudos de caso europeus – bem ilustrados vale muito a pena ver.
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a referida consulta direta do documento.
Nos T1 + com 72 m2 existe uma zona
multifuncional encerrável junto a sala.
HAPPI2 launched at the end of 2012 and details
what has been achieved already and best recommendations …:
- Generous/ Flexible Space Standards
- Natural light (inc circulation spaces)
- Avoidance of internal
corridors and single aspect dwellings for light and
ventilation
- ‘Care ready’ homes to accommodate emerging
technologies
- Circulation that avoids institutionalisation and encourages interaction
- Lively multi-purpose social spaces that link
with the community
- Engagement with the street
- Energy efficient ‘green’ buildings
- Adequate storage inside and outside
home
- Homezone design of outside spaces with
pedestrian priority
Stuttgart HAPPI Study Tour – November 2012
Space Planning and Flexibility
Exemplo com 80m2 para
T1 +
Flexibility and Open Plan
Living
- Offers better accessibility for those with
mobility impairments – less doors!
- Suits current preference for open plan spaces
for ultimate flexibility and connectivity between spaces
- Kitchen is now an important social space
rather than a ‘working space’
Realmente o “plano livre” é excelente para “condicionados”,
mas talvez como opção.
Private External Amenity
- Good size for wheelchair accessibility and
furniture
- Use of sliding/glazed screens or winter
gardens to maximise use all year round
Caso de importante e excelente fogo T1 com
inúmeras microzonas funcionais e ambientais.
4.17. - 2013 - Assisted Living Platform, The Long Term
Care Revolution: … innovatory models to
support older people with disabilities in the Netherlands
Fontes e autorias respetivas:
V HLIN-Case-Study-Netherlands.pdf
HLIN CS 76
Written by Anthea Tinker, Jay Ginn and Eloi Ribe
at the Institute of Gerontology, Department of Social Science, Health and
Medicine, King’s College London for the Technology Strategy Board
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a consulta direta do documento.
Innovations for older
people with modest long term care needs
Older disabled people tend to resist increased
dependence on their personal networks and to avoid seeking alternative help
despite need for it. They wish to preserve their autonomy and are also aware of
policy rhetoric urging self-reliance (Grootegoed & van Dijk, 2012). Consistent with the aim to empower older people and to promote
independence, a number of initiatives has developed in the Netherlands to
help those with relatively modest care needs to continue living in their own
homes as long as possible. These
include telecare services, assistive technologies, Smart Homes, internet video
links, Apartments for Life and co-housing and care villages.
Telecare and telehealth offer remote monitoring of individuals’ health and needs, avoiding the
need for them to visit their doctors. Use has increased since the early 2000s
(Botsis & Hartvigsen, 2008) and this technology is seen as cost effective
in many countries. …
Internet use helps older people to keep in contact with family and friends who do
not live nearby, providing a vital connection with the world, especially for
those with physical disabilities. The City of Almere took this further,
investing in an extensive high-speed broadband network, the ‘Versilvering’
programme, in 2009. The aim is to overcome the constraints of location and
mobility, so increasing the integration of the older population and also
boosting economic growth. The project to provide video-enabled services was
planned with the cooperation of the Internet Business Solutions Group, a
community welfare group, a theatre with cultural centre, Almere Breed Community
TV and service providers BT and UNET…
Smart Homes can meet a variety of needs, including through use of assistive
technologies. The latter can be defined as ‘any device or system that allows an
individual to perform a task they would otherwise be unable to do or increases
the ease and safety with which the task can be performed’. This can promote
growing old in good health and maintaining independence. In the Netherlands,
devices include alarms, grab rails, level thresholds, raised seats on toilets,
raised beds, height-adjustable work surfaces and stair lifts that cope even
with winding staircases, something not yet achieved in the UK (Tinker,
McCreadie, & Lansley, 2003). Smart technology may include a network of
sensors and cameras distributed strategically in the house…
Apartments for Life (A4L) were first built in Rotterdam in the 1990s by the non-profit Humanitas
Foundation. They are designed as ‘age proof’ apartments that can be adapted as
disabilities develop. Initially three complexes were built, with 350
apartments, but there are now 15 complexes with 1,700 apartments housing an
estimated 2,500 individuals (Humanitas Foundation, 2012). The apartments are
available to couples as well as individuals and residents can organise whatever
care provision they need. Apartments may be purchased or rented and in the 195
apartments of Humanitas-Bergweg the rent is subsidised…
Co-housing (centraalwonen). This movement started in the 1960s, mainly founded by young people, and
the number of schemes has increased since then. Each household has the
normal rooms but shares facilities such as laundries, meeting places, hobby
rooms, workshops and garden space.
Schemes usually have 30 to 70 households, sometimes in self-managing clusters. Most
are rented from a housing cooperative but some are owner-occupied (Bakker,
2009).
In the 1980s, communities
for seniors, ‘living groups of the elderly’ were developed, to meet the needs
of the growing proportion of the population aged over 50. These are supported by local government as they are expected to
reduce care costs, but they are started by interested individuals and couples…
This author notes that individuals need to be
able to cope with the conflicts that sometimes arise in making democratic
decisions and negotiating on the basis of equality, co-operation and a sense of
responsibility; there are no
leaders. The reward is a sense of belonging, reciprocity and learning from
others.
Members value this form of living for its warmth
and companionability (gezelligheid), social interaction and mutual support.
Shared meals are rare but members act as friendly neighbours. Some older people choose a mixed-age
community, others an age-based one. An age range from 55 to over 90 years
allows natural renewal to take place, with younger and more able members
providing help for the most disabled. ..
Care Cooperative village - Hoogeloon. In 2005, residents built on a traditional model of the farm
cooperative and organised a care cooperative – now with 200 members including
volunteers, paid coordinators and professional healthcare staff. The aim was to
meet older people’s need for health and social care in their own village,
instead of having to travel to a town. An
ex-care home director provided necessary know-how and contacts.
Volunteers take part … to cook meals for older disabled residents,
provide other domestic help required and transport when necessary… Staff are recruited locally so that they can
provide a rapid response in emergencies. Garden maintenance is done by workers
in sheltered employment…
Innovations for people with
intensive long term care needs
In the UK, residential care is widely dreaded by older people; seven out
of ten said they were ‘scared’ at the thought of going into a care home, no doubt influenced by a number of recent scandals highlighting abuse
and neglect.
… For
those with dementia, care in institutions is described as ‘poor’ by the UK
Alzheimer’s Society (Hunt, 2013). However, the Netherlands has examples of
residential homes that are carefully designed to offer a more home-like, normal
and enjoyable life. Innovative residential complexes designed to prolong
independent living, while ensuring 24-hour care is available, are outlined
below.
Será importante considerar que a prestação de
cuidados em ambiente doméstico será talvez uma atividade de mão de obra
intensiva praticável por muitas pessaoas não especializadas; embora seja
essencial a existência de quadros de apoio e informação, formação etc.
WiekslagKrabbelaan. This scheme is described as
a satellite nursing home, designed for dementia care in an environment that is familiar, enabling, ‘home-like’ and secure;
the home is connected to its
neighbourhood and promotes interaction with the wider community. Each
household has its own front door, private
bedrooms each of 25 square metres with a basin, one bathroom and a shared
living area with kitchen, dining and sitting…
The care focus is on ‘adding life to the days’ of residents.
Schoolchildren aged 15-19 work with staff after school until 7pm; they may help prepare dinner, stay to eat with residents and get them
ready for the evening, providing some
intergenerational mingling.
Family members of former residents often act as
volunteers and more are being sought, to strengthen links with the
neighbourhood…
Hogeweyk village in Weesp, near Amsterdam, is designed for individuals with dementia who
can no longer live independently in their own home. Care is available 24 hours,
seven days a week. The whole range of dementia is catered for, including the
mildly impaired and largely autonomous, those who are moderately or severely
cognitively impaired and need professional supervision on a daily basis and
also those who are bed-bound.
The aim is to replicate
daily life in a village of households, thus making residents as comfortable as
possible and enabling them ‘to continue to live in the manner to which they
were accustomed prior the onset of dementia’ (Notter, Spijker,
& Stomp, 2004, p. 449).
To that end, they have created seven different life styles within the
village as ‘homes within homes’. Each
home is planned so as to reflect a particular set of social circumstances:
- ‘Het Gooi’for well-off residents attaching
importance to etiquette and appearance;
- Culturel, for those with interests in art
and other culture;
- Amsterdamse for city dwellers;
- Indische for those with an Indonesian
background;
- Christelijke for practising Christians;
- Ambachtelijke for those who had a skilled
trade; and
- Huiselijke for those whose focus had been family
caring and domestic life.
Este tipo de “especialização” doméstica tem
de se basear numa importante adaptabilidade básica dos fogos e na sua
diversificação.
… Planning and design
followed the philosophy of providing normality, with as much independence as
possible in a safe, home-like setting but with opportunities for interactions,
activities, outdoor leisure and being part of a neighbourhood. A mix of accommodation types, care need levels and facilities allows
for choice and change, as well as for maintaining connections with family and
friends.
The motive of maximising profit has been absent
or secondary. This contrasts with some corporate-owned care home chains in the
UK, which have treated the homes as assets for trading in international
markets, to the detriment of the residents’ security. Other UK
housing-with-care schemes, such as those run by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation,
have a more responsible and caring philosophy.
The potential is clear for local enterprises to
provide caring services in the UK in a similar way to those in the Netherlands
operating in partnership with a housing association or care cooperative village…
4.18.
- 2012 – Sobre os Maggie Centers
Fontes e autorias respetivas:
What makes an environment healing?
Users and designer about the Maggie’s Centre
London
M. Annemans1,2, Ch. Van Audenhove3, H. Vermolen2,
and A. Heylighen1,
Proceedings of 8th International Design and
Emotion Conference London 2012 Central Saint Martins College of Art &
Design, 11-14 September 2012 Edited by J. Brassett, J. McDonnell & M.
Malpass
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a referida consulta direta do documento.
… This analysis enables us
to start uncovering the meaning of a healing environment. At Maggie’s London
the combination of a well thought architectural brief, an engaged architect,
and suiting client seem to form the base of a successful building that is not
only designed as healing but is also experienced as such by its daily users.
… There is an intimate relationship between our
emotions and the things around us," Peter Zumthor (2010) writes. Whether
an environment works healing or not is often closely related to the emotional
experience that is generated by it. Which elements or aspects are responsible
for this is investigated based on the case of the Maggie's Cancer Caring Centre
in London. The insight, as expressed by Zumthor, is rather recent. Whereas
early research about the relationship between the built environment and its
effect on health focuses largely on medical outcomes (Rubin & Center for
Health Design. 1998)(Ulrich e.a. 2004), more recently influence on the mental
welfare is being recognized. As the World Health Organization states:
"Health is a state of optimal physical, mental and social wellbeing, and
not merely the absence of disease and infirmity." Based on this definition
we want to gain insight in the spatial experience of patients and provide
architects with sufficient information to design wholesome hospital environments.
… Charles Jencks himself, co-founder of the
Maggie’s Centres, is the first one to contradict the strictly clinical effect
of architecture (Jencks 2006). Still, he argues the centres can definitely make
a difference, for five reasons (Jencks & Heathcote 2010). Many of these
reasons involve social support. Cancer caring centres can alleviate the death
sentence, by negating the negative effect of receiving one. Training patients
in stress management reduces the impairment of stress on the immune system. Positive
feelings, enhanced by the building and complementary therapies, may contribute
to longevity. And, an extended shared knowledge about possible new treatments
or therapies can provide users of the Maggie’s Centres with informed opinions,
which may make a difference over time. Finally the centres can also work like a
placebo, they work because they operate on the beliefs of patients…
… The Maggie’s Centres and the way they are
designed should raise your spirits, be safe and welcoming, but not too cosy and
increase the sense of connectedness between people...
To reach this goal, architects are chosen of
which the organization thinks that they will rise to the challenge of making
spaces that help the people using the buildings to cope. To do so, the
architect should go beyond preconceived ideas...
4.19.
- 2011 Casos – Le Port, La Réunion 2011 integração de variadas tipol
Fontes e autorias respetivas :
Résidence-services du Mail de l’Océan,
PUCA, Logement design pour tous
Prisca AURE (Le Port) : prisca.aure@ville-port.re
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a referida consulta direta do documento.
… Le terrain identifi é a une superfi cie de 1 643
m2 et une capacité constructive de 4 800 m2 de SHON en R+4 ; ce qui équivaut à
environ 75 petits appartements (T2) avec deux niveaux de soussol pour des
stationnements. Le rez-de-chaussée accueillerait les services. L’objectif de
l’opération est de proposer une offre de logements pour la population locale
âgée et à mobilité réduite, à revenus modestes, en centre-ville. Cette
résidence-services non médicalisée s’appuiera sur un plan global « gérontologie
et accessibilité » coordonné par le CCAS et sur des opérateurs de services de
proximité et à la personne, externalisés par rapport à l’opération.
Il s’agira d’en faire une résidence 100%
accessible, alliant domotique et « géron-technologie » afi n de
maintenir des personnes âgées ou des personnes à mobilité réduite, y compris
dépendantes, à domicile. Une attention particulière sera portée à la conception
du bâtiment (qui devra inclure la dimension de qualité environnementale et
répondre au référentiel PERENE), aux qualités d’usage des logements, des
espaces de transition entre extérieur et intérieur (privés et publics) et des
espaces de convivialité. La création d’emploi via le développement de services
de proximité et de services à la personne est un enjeu majeur du projet.
4.20. – 2010 – (coop) SeniorForum: A whole concept (com
custos)
Solutions to Global Aging - World Habitat
Finalista dos World Habitat Awards 2010
Mirum AB is a private limited liability company,
registered in 2008 for the purpose of designing and constructing housing for
elderly people (and associated activities).
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a referida consulta direta do documento.
… The SeniorForum concept for modern living for elderly people was developed as a result of national and European research programmes.
The concept involves the provision of affordable accommodation and care for
elderly people within a cooperative
housing association that all elderly persons in a town are entitled to
join. It provides both a residential complex for those who need it and a range
of services and social facilities for those who wish to continue living in
their own homes.
… Three main models have been developed – these
are Bonus (for larger communities with cooperative associations of up to 200
members), Habitat (for small communities with cooperative associations of
between 50 and 100 members) and Focus which provides for those who need
full-time nursing care.
The construction cost is €1,800 – €2,400/m2 (US$2,600 – US$3,500/m2) of dwelling area, including 5-10 m2 of common
area. The construction is to be financed by Swedish credit institutions
during the construction phase, and the final financing met the cooperative
association’s members (25 per cent to 30 per cent) and the credit institution
(70 per cent to 75 per cent). While costs are high due to the very high energy
and care standards in Sweden, expenditure levels are kept more affordable by
the cooperative association’s members financing a part of the project
themselves, often by selling their own house or apartment.
The cooperative housing associations own the
residential complexes with each member depositing a sum of between €25,000
(US$36,000) and €40,000 (US$58,000) if they live in the complex itself and
€1,000 (US$1,450) if they live in the
community and wish to access the services and social facilities. These sums
are returned when they leave the cooperative. These sums deposited by the
elderly people cover approximately 25 per cent of the costs, with the remainder being raised from
Swedish credit institutions by the cooperative or the municipality.
This deposit is much lower than the deposit for
a normal building-society flat or for normal flat ownership, which typically
ranges from €80,000 (US$116,000) to €110,000 (US$159,500). The rent of €95/m2
(US$138/m2) is also much lower than corresponding private apartments, as the
rent is negotiated with the residents’ cooperative association and there is no profit element involved.
All members pay a monthly fee to cover the social activities organised. This
fee includes the cost of one employee,
who organises the various activities…
Barriers
Elderly resistance to
change
The bank’s conservative
vision on financial security around the project.
Transparent and well worked-out financial plans,
together with the fact that all apartments will
have been let before the start of construction, create the necessary
security.
The trademarks Bonus and Habitat have emerged as a result of a rather
new and unknown piece of legislation. It takes time
before elderly people, politicians and financial institutions understand and
use the advantages provided by the legislation…
4.21. - 2010 - Elderly Housing
Design in Charlton, Massachusetts (Sun City)
Fontes e autorias respetivas:
A Major Qualifying Project submitted to the
faculty of Worcester Polytechnic Institute in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Science.
Andrew Abderrazzaq
Christopher Lacagnina
Derek Snow
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a referida consulta direta do documento.
… There are several ways of accomplishing this
task. The first two ways are for the elderly to remodel their current homes
either by themselves or by the help of a contractor. The modifications are
based around a “gerontologic design”. This design is the remodeling of an
existing space in response to the deteriorating health of a home owner
(Rosenfeld, 2008).
The third option, which
pertains to our project focus, is for the elderly to move into a residence that
already has the necessary modifications, but still a sense of community. As retirement communities became more popular in the United States in
the 1960’s it usually meant people were forced to relocate far away from family
and friends due to the lack of facilities currently in operation. Today, the number of these communities is
growing and becoming more local and having to downsize from a private
residence no longer requires a large travel distance or has a lack in amenities
that fit the new residents’ needs.
Sun City Festival Facility
East of Phoenix, Arizona there is a 3,100 acre
active-retirement home called the Sun City Festival and is considered a great
place for the twentieth century retiree. Sun City Festival was created for
adults, ages 55 and older, which are still considered active and assistance
independent.
This community invests a large amount into the
social and physical aspects of living to maintain health. This means residents
have the capability to leave the complex on their own or participate in
numerous activities on-site that range from grocery shopping to 18 holes of
golf.
Fitness centers, such as the Sage Center that is
located in the community, provide recreational use of pools and exercise rooms
for clubs and classes with fitness instructors (Sun City Festival, 2009). The
team project considers this type of active lifestyle and incorporates it into
the design of our facility…
In Sweden there is a need
to accommodate the elderly who are in the final stage of their lives. There
have been substantial studies regarding the health support system in elderly
homes. One such study, called Health Supportive Design in Elderly Care Homes, explored design factors and their usefulness through a series of field
studies and interviews.
“According to this research, the valuable
factors to support health and well-being for the elderly are as follows;
1) Community
integration: In urban planning, these elderly care homes are generally
places close to a residential area center or a city center. Services are often
shared between residents and community members at large, consequently there is
a flow of “visitors” of all ages connecting with the facility on a daily basis.
2) Homelike
environment: A noteworthy aspect of Swedish elderly care homes is keeping
the facility appearance as homelike as possible. The associations with home may
be explored through the appearance and configuration of both the exterior and
interior of the building. These homes seemed to be designed with a conscious
aim to create a homelike setting.
3) Accessibility
to garden and nature: The courtyard is a well developed concept in
designing elderly care homes in Sweden. They are generally safe and easily
accessible to the residents” (Design and Health)…
Space Standards and Layout Investigation
From Design of Assisted Living, 2007 by Victor
Regnier and VNR Metric Handbook of Architectural Standards, 1979 by Patricia
Tutt and David Adler, the MQP group found two general bedroom layouts and one
basic general floor plan to be most helpful.
As found in Appendix A,
Sections A.1 and A.2, the two general bedroom layouts are from Design of Assisted Living and contain
simple rectangular rooms that have easily accessible space and sufficient area
for the use of each space.
As áreas dos quartos a que se chegou foram: 12 e 16 m2
The general floor plan that was investigated, shown in Appendix A, Section A.3, also had a simple design and kept
the rooms and open spaces to square and rectangular shapes.
It is designed with central usage areas for
residents including sitting areas, a kitchen and dining area, a sewing room,
and medical space with staff areas…
… it was decided that an initial value of 130
occupants in two buildings would be used to form an elderly community based on
the information obtained at the site visit. In the preliminary design 30
percent of the occupants in the buildings, 40 residents, are to be
accommodated in 20 double rooms. Since
the information from the book was based on a 40 person facility and the
design for our group is based on 130 occupants, certain areas were multiplied
by a factor of 3.25 to accurately depict the amount of needed space…
No documento existe uma Town of Charlton Zoning Bylaw, que
define as condições legais para “Senior Living Facilities” para maiores de 55
4.22. - 2009 - Homes for our
old age Independent living by design CABE
Fontes e autorias respetivas:
Published in 2009 by the Commission for
Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE), based on research commissioned
by the Department of Health, conducted by the Women’s Design Service and the
University of the West of England.
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a referida consulta direta do documento.
Older people want homes
that give them independence, choice and the ability to maintain their
friendships and family contacts
… In 2007 there were 1.3 million people aged 85
and over. By 2032 that is predicted to be 3.1 million
Source: Ageing and Mortality in the UK: National
Statistician’s annual article on the population, Office for National
Statistics, 2008, p1 tinyurl.com/6kysl3
… million pensioners are so poor they cannot
afford to heat their homes, eat healthy food or replace household equipment
Source: Help the Aged website www.helptheaged.org.uk
… The number of people with
dementia is set to double to 1.4 million over the
next 30 years and the costs to the UK economy will go from £17 billion to
£50 billion
Source: Mental Capital and Well Being: Making
the most of ourselves in the 21st century:
executive summary, Foresight, part of the Government Office for Science, p32,
see tinyurl.com/musgnr
… 48 per cent of those aged 65 or over say
the television is their main company
… The number of people aged 75 and over
living alone will increase by over 40 per cent in the next 20 years
Source: One Voice: Shaping our ageing society,
Help the Aged and Age Concern, April 2009…
Uma mistura
explosiva de fragilidades etárias, risco de demências, solidão, pouco dinheiro
e tudo isto num número de casos avassalador, caraterizará o futuro bem próximo.
4
Issues facing commissioners and designers
Older people want buildings that enable them to
stay independent and allow them contact with their friends and family.
Space is important, too. No one wants to live in
isolated or unsafe parts of town and most people want access to local
amenities, such as parks and shops.
Good design is vital, because it makes for a
building where people are able to live how they want, and enables the delivery
of home care and/or support services.
However, good home care is not just about the
design of a building; it is also about the services provided within that
building…
We expect buildings for social care to be
successful as homes and as important resources for the local community. This
means we need to consult planners, designers, social care professionals and
local people, as well as residents and their friends and relatives.
See
www.lifetimehomes.org.uk
Lessons from the case
studies …
- Internal house design and layout needs to be
flexible to accommodate changing care or support needs
- Independence and quality of life require
high-quality design, management and services
- Design for social care means future-proofing
the buildings we already have so that a resident knows they can remain in their
home as their needs change
- Schemes need to be seen as community assets
which allow residents to mix with local people but also enable them to feel
their home is secure and private
- Developers and providers should talk to, and
involve, residents, both before and after development and occupancy.
Seguem-se notas variadas, retiradas de um variado conjunto de casos:
Colliers Gardens, Bristol, Extra care housing for older people … 50 flats for older people,
owned and managed by public sector
The two-bedroom
accommodation is popular and the design enables
people with dementia to continue living at home.
Informal communal areas
have proved popular and the communal dining room is a natural hub.
The flats are on two floors in spurs branching
off from either side of the main circulation area , with an informal
communal seating area on the upper level.
Skylights bring daylight
flooding into the building from above as well as the sides, bringing a real sense of connection between the inside and outside…However,
not all the windows open and it can get stuffy.
A double-height communal
lounge and dining room provides a social hub at the front of the
building beside the entrance, and opens onto the communal gardens through a
glazed façade.
The internal glazing to the entrance hall and
arrival point allows residents to keep an eye on who is coming and going.
The scheme is used by local
people who join in events organised by the Colliers
Gardens social club. The building also houses a therapy room, hair salon and IT
room.
The main corridor changes angle, and runs along
a slight incline, making it seem more
like a winding path than an institutional corridor.
Windows on both sides look
out onto the gardens, which are designed in a circular pattern for
people with dementia.
The use of colour coding and different
textures in the internal circulation areas also help people remember where
they are.
… The flats also work well for a disabled man
and his wife. He is able to sleep in the second bedroom of their flat if he
is having a restless night and uses a computer in the room to surf the
internet…
Esta matéria dá para desenvolver, porque é bem importante
Non-residents use the main entrance but cannot
get into the residential areas of the building, ensuring the privacy, safety
and security of tenants…
Esta matéria dá para desenvolver, porque é bem importante
Lingham Court, Lambeth,
London; Extra care housing for older people
alongside general needs housing for sale…The 30 affordable
housing flats for older people …The scheme also includes 40 flats for outright
sale… The total cost was £10 million and the outright sale flats
subsidized the affordable housing…
Esta matéria dá para desenvolver, porque é bem importante
A prefabricated construction with
factoryassembled wall and floor panels. All flats are on the upper floors
for security. Thermal insulation far exceeds building regulations levels.
The basic concept is
straightforward: people have a home of their own, with their own front door,
and everything else spins off this.
… promote
independence. For example, this is the reason why the lunch club operates only
four days a week, to ensure that residents do not lose basic cooking skills.
People are encouraged to attend …
The expansive central
circulation areas of the extra care building have a somewhat empty and impersonal feel to them. In most cases, there is no evidence
of residents’ presence or individuality around their front doors, and the
absence of internal windows opening from flats onto the common space produces a very clear sense of separation between the
private life behind the front doors, and the common life of the building. Even the roof terrace is empty of plants,
because of staff concerns about potential trip hazards, especially when
grandchildren are visiting.
Estas matérias dão para desenvolver, porque são bem importantez
Darwin Court, Southwark,
London; Seventy six rented homes including flats for frail older people and a
resource centre…
Edifício com diversos prémios
Although the bedrooms are
fairly small, each unit has a spare room which can be used by
relatives and there is a separate guest room that can be booked.
Sixteen flats were designed
for frail older people from the start. Peabody accepted the architect’s
proposal of designing the remaining flats as good quality, general needs
housing, with level access and the potential for adaptability in future.
Esta matéria dá para desenvolver, porque é bem importante
… It is a challenge to co-ordinate the needs of
the different groups that rent the spaces at low cost with the needs of the
tenants. Making the café appealing to both locals and tenants has also been a
problem.
It is operated by Peabody, through agency
workers, but only during the week. Peabody would not build a swimming pool
again as it has been hugely expensive to run, but the trust is committed to
running it as a community resource…
Barton Mews, Barton-under-Needwood Staffordshire. A private development of 29 extra care
apartments for sale, aimed at affluent, older local buyers, or buyers with
local family connections…
The housing, which extends round a courtyard, is
above a doctor’s surgery and cottage hospital, with separate entry for each.
The scheme offers a broad range of services, aspirational design features and
accessible and adaptable flats and corridors…
Some flats bought by
children stand empty because parents do not want to move in…
None of the one- and two-bedroom flats (the
latter measuring 80 square metres) were allocated for wheelchair use from the
outset. Barton Mews has individual bathrooms that are mainly accessible and
ergonomically designed wet rooms.
There is also an assisted bathroom on each
floor, equipped with the latest lifting equipment. Adaptations can easily be
made to individual flats, including the installation of assistive technology
beyond the basic alarm system provided.
Painswick Retirement
Village near Stroud, Gloucestershire. A private development of 56 apartments
for older people and en suite nursing care bedrooms in a rural location.
Eighteen of the apartments
are designated for independent living (1x1 bed, 16x2 bed,
1x3 bed) and 38 for assisted living (32x1 bed, 6x2 bed).
The retirement village is based on a philosophy
of continuing care, and residents do not need to move unless they need hospital
admission. Most residents fund their own housing and care, and applicants undergo risk and health assessments.
The village aims for a population with mixed
levels of care. Access to other amenities such as a supermarket or cinema means
travelling to a nearby town.
It took several years to obtain planning
permission, largely because the land was a greenfield site.
The 18 independent living apartments have two
bedrooms, two bathrooms, a kitchen and a parking space. Some also have a
private balcony or patio. The 38 assisted living apartments have a living room,
galley kitchen and bedroom with en-suite shower room.
The price includes food and soft drinks, a
laundry, a daily maid service and utilities (gas, electricity and water).
Flexible care packages can be purchased as
needed…
The nursing centre has 24 beds and offers
long-term and post-operative care, but not dementia care.
The village caters for people aged 55 or over
with a range of care and support needs, including visual impairment, deafness,
incontinence and moderate memory problems.
Richmond Villages’ on-site domiciliary care team
operates 24 hours a day…
The village has a communal lounge, dining room,
restaurant, laundry, guest rooms, garden, conservatory, community centre, hobby
room, café, shop, hairdresser, library with internet access, gym, swimming pool
and jacuzzi.
There is a small treatment room and most
residents are registered with the local GP and dentist. All communal areas are
accessible…
Painswick village is about 100 metres away …
Croftspar Springboig Avenue
Glasgow. A small, specialised scheme of seven supported houses for people with
dementia.
A partnership between public sector provider
Cube Housing Association and Alzheimer Scotland. Cube builds housing and leases
it to care providers, but does not provide care services itself. Capital
funding was from Communities Scotland.
Staff are on site 24 hours a day, one on duty at
night, and one sleeping over…
A group of small, individual houses around a
landscaped courtyard with a warden alarm system and movement sensors in the
bedrooms. The scheme is designed with level access and to maximise solar gain.
The circular layout helps people with dementia
to find their way around the scheme and the small scale appeals to residents.
However, the residents do
not like the open plan design of their homes and the modern bathroom furniture
and underfloor heating is confusing for people with dementia.
Esta matéria dá para desenvolver, porque é bem importante e pode ser
aplicada para variados outros aspetos menos correntes.
4.23. - 2006 - Designed with care: Design and
neighbourhood healthcare buildings CABE
Fontes e autorias respetivas.
Published in 2006 by the Commission for Architecture
and the Built Environment (CABE)
Researched and written by Timothy Mason.
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a consulta direta do documento.
Top tips for healthy
buildings
A good brief, consultation and collaboration are
crucial for a successful building
Good design can
successfully bring together health services not previously offered in a single
building …
Space and light can be used to create a calm
atmosphere …
It is possible to create a robust building to
hospital standards which has a humane atmosphere …
Thoughtful interior design for specific needs
can create a relaxed and caring environment
Close attention to storage can make a huge
difference to the qualities of space and calm …
Health buildings can be multifunctional and open
to future uses …
Multiple stakeholder involvement leads to more
successful outcomes ..
A high quality building and surroundings can
contribute to local people making the most of their local healthcare facilities
…
CABE’s key elements of good
healthcare buildings - CABE’s 10 key elements;
- Good integrated design
- Public open space
- A clear plan
- A single reception point
- Circulation and waiting areas
- Materials, finishes and furnishing
- Natural light and ventilation
- Storage
- Adapting to future changes
- Out of hours community use …
4.24. - 2005 - A collection of case studies
demonstrating exemplar ‘sustainable community’ projects across Europe
Fontes e autorias respetivas.
The Egan Review, Skills for Sustainable
Communities’1 defines seven components that together constitute the
‘common goal’ of a Sustainable Community.
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (2004) The
Egan Review – Skills for Sustainable Communities, ODPM
Site importante: https://policytransfer.metropolis.org/case-studies/city-of-tomorrow
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a consulta direta do documento.
… There is no substitute for visiting projects to
experience at first hand the quality and ‘feel’ of a place, and to develop a
personal understanding of how a community works. All of the case studies
presented here have been visited by the author, and in many cases, meetings
have been held with local residents, designers and key-decision makers involved
in the creation of a ‘Sustainable Community’…
… vibrant harmonious and inclusive
communities.
A sense of community identity and belonging.
Tolerance, respect and engagement with people
from different cultures, backgrounds and beliefs.
Friendly, co-operative and helpful behaviour in
neighbourhoods.
Opportunities for cultural, leisure, community,
sport and other activities.
Low levels of crime and anti-social behaviour
with visible and effective and community-friendly policing…
All people are socially included and have
similar life opportunities…
… effective and inclusive participation,
representation and leadership.
Strategic, visionary, representative,
accountable governance systems that enable inclusive, active and effective
participation by individuals and organisations.
Strong, informed and effective leadership and
partnerships that lead by example (e.g. government, business, community).
Strong, inclusive, community and voluntary
sector (e.g. resident’s associations, neighbourhood watch).
A sense of civic values, responsibilities and
pride.
Continuous improvement through effective
delivery, monitoring and feedback at all levels…
…. providing places for people to live in an
environmentally-friendly way.
Efficient use of resources now and in the future
in the built environment and service provision (e.g. energy efficiency, land,
water resources, flood defence, waste minimisation etc.).
Living in a way that minimises the negative
environmental impact and enhances the positive impact (e.g. recycling, walking,
cycling).
Protecting and improving natural resources and
biodiversity (e.g. air quality, noise, water quality).
Having due regard for the needs of future
generations in current decisions and actions…
.. a
quality built and natural environment.
Creating a sense of place (e.g. a place with a
positive ‘feeling’ for people, and local distinctiveness).
Well-maintained, local, user-friendly public and
green spaces with facilities for everyone including children and older people.
Sufficient range, diversity and affordability of
housing within a balanced housing market.
A high-quality, well-designed built environment
of appropriate size, scale, density, design and layout that complements the
distinctive local character of the community.
High quality, mixed-use, durable, flexible and
adaptable buildings…
… good transport services and communication
linking people to jobs, schools, health and other services.
Transport facilities, including public
transport, that help people travel within and between communities.
Facilities to encourage safe local walking and
cycling.
Accessible and appropriate local parking
facilities.
Widely available and effective
telecommunications and internet access…
… a flourishing and diverse local economy.
A wide range of jobs and training opportunities.
Sufficient land and buildings to support
economic prosperity and change.
Dynamic job and business creation.
A strong business community with links into the
wider economy…
… a full range of
appropriate, accessible public, private, community and voluntary services.
Well-educated people from well-performing local
school, further and higher education and training for lifelong learning.
High quality, local health care and social
services.
Provision of range of accessible, affordable
public, community, voluntary and private services (e.g. retail, food,
commercial, utilities).
Services providers who think and act long term
and beyond their own immediate geographical and interest boundaries…
4.25. - 2001 - ICA Housing Co-operatives Habitat II
plus 5
Fontes e autorias respetivas:
Innovative Approaches to Co-operative Solutions
of Housing Problems of the Poor. Case studies from member-organizations
Ed Hans Münkner, Marburg 2001
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a consulta direta do documento.
São apresentados casos de reabilitação
de partes de povoações visando as carências habitacionais existentes em termos
de grupos étnicos e/ou etários e simultaneamente a revitalização urbana local
utilizando as valências participativas e organizacionais de cooperativas pois
trata-se de matéria extremamente sensível e importante.
Entre os vários exemplos apresentados destacam-se, em termos muito
práticos de projecto de espaços privados:
- Diversas formas de “dosear a ligação”
entre espaços comuns e privados, preparando a “passagem” de variadas formas,
enquanto do lado doméstico se desenvolvem ao máximo as condições de
espaciosidade, atratividade e apropriação – no limite quase como um hotel
extremamente “doméstico”.
- Apostar numa clara espaciosidade, mesmo nas tipologias mais pequenas,
onde, por exemplo, num grande T0 podem existir verdadeiras salas estruturadas
num amplo leque de microzonas; transformando-o num verdadeiro “estúdio”.
- e avançando para os espaços comuns importará aplicar uma idêntica
filosofia de espaciosidade, multifuncionalidade, microzonagem e domesticidade.
4.26. - 1974 - De Drie Hoven elderly housing, Amsterdam
Fontes e autorias respetivas:
De Drie Hoven eld erly housing, Amsterdam
(1964-1974), projecto de Herman Hertzberger
Louis Bouwmeesterstraat 377, 1065 NS Amsterdam. Gross
foor area 3.300 m2; Client Nederlandse Centrale voor Huisvesting van Bejaarden
(NCHB)
Apontam-se, em seguida, sob a forma de
citações a itálico, retiradas do referido documento, aspetos julgados de grande
interesse, mas que não substituem a consulta direta do documento.
The building, intended for physically and mentally challenged people, consists of 55 dwellings for couples, housing units for
190 people and a nursing home with 250 beds… [cerca de 500
pessoas no total]
The requirements for the dierent sections of the
building are incorporated into a common building order; a system of columns,
beams and oors, whereby, in a xed and consistently applied module, a large amount of freedom in the utilisation of space arises.
It is assumed that the regulating power of the
basic structure will be great enough to enable the incorporation of subsequent
additions, however chaotic, without its unity being severely disturbed. The
structure can be regarded as incomplete in another respect as well, namely in
the colourless and unnished appearance of the materials used. It is hoped that this will
stimulate the residents into exerting their inence in shaping the
environment to their liking…
Muito, mas mesmo muito fica por dizer sobre este conjunto pioneiro de
habitação para os mais idosos; mas as imagens obtidas são verdadeiramente inspiradoras; sendo que é excelente
a microzonagem dos apartamentos T1 ou T0+ e extraordinária a respetiva relação
“bem doseada” com os amplos espaços comuns de acesso.
Entrada tem recesso do lado comum, que a personaliza; depois há um hall
privado e encerrável; do qual se acede à casa de banho (que também tem acesso
pelo quarto) e ao resto da casa através da zona de refeições; esta zona
conjuga-se com um espaço amplo com longo balcão de cozinha, com a zona de estar
e com um amplo balcão reentrante e quadrangular, que ilumina diretamente as
zonas da cozinha e da sala; da zona da sala uma ampla porta de correr liga à
ampla zona de quarto; contíguo à cozinha há um pequeno espaço encerrável.
NOTAS FINAIS DO ARTIGO
Na
Parte I do presente artigo, editada na última semana foram divulgados os
seguintes casos:
1. 2018 Levensloopbestendige
(Apartments for Life) in The Netherlands
2.
2018 Habitação para a aposentação + – McCarthy & Stone
3.
2018 Casos de projecto do PRP UKI
4. 2017 Quality designs for later life housing: Highs
and lows – cottage HAPPIness
5. 2017 AV
6. 2016 Woodchester Valley Village
7. 2016 Casos Orchard Cove
8. 2016 Accessing shared
ownership for people with disabilities in Wales: An overview of using the HOLD
scheme
9. 2016 Independent Living
with Care
10. 2016 Architectural
Competitions for Care and Caregiving
11. 2015 Maggie Centers
Anexo:
listagem linkada dos artigos já editados no âmbito do PHAI3C e que
desenvolveram toda a respetiva base teórico-prática, anterior à atual análise
de casos específicos
Listagem
linkada de 51 artigos realizados por António Baptista Coelho na infohabitar,
com base direta nos textos, ideias e opiniões dos autores referidos nos
documentos que integram a respetiva listagens bibliográficas.
. Infohabitar,
Ano XV, n.º 706, terça -feira, outubro 22, 2019, Pensar um novo
habitar intergeracional: alguns comentários iniciais - Infohabitar 706 (5 pp., 2 ffigg.).
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVI, n.º 714, terça -feira, janeiro 07, 2020, Oportunidade,
utilidade e exigências do Programa de Habitação Adaptável Intergeracional
Cooperativa a Custos Controlados (PHAI3C) - Infohabitar 714 (4 pp.).
Infohabitar, Ano XVI,
n.º 716, terça -feira, janeiro 21, 2020, Sobre o passado e o
futuro da habitação cooperativa a custos controlados e as novas soluções
intergeracionais colaborativas – Infohabitar 716 (7 pp., 4
figg.).
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 805 – Notas sobre o
enquadramento da qualidade de vida e residencial especialmente dirigida para
idosos e pessoas fragilizadas - versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica # 805
Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, fevereiro 16, 2022. (21 p.)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 806 – Notas sobre qualidade
de vida e qualidade arquitetónica e urbana na habitação para idosos e
intergeracional - versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica # 806 Infohabitar. Lisboa,
quarta-feira, fevereiro 23, 2022. (57 p.)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 807 – Qualidade de vida e
qualidade pormenorizada na habitação para idosos e intergeracional “I” - versão de
trabalho e base bibliográfica # 807 Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira,
março 09, 2022; e Infohabitar, Ano XVIII, n.º 808 – Qualidade na
habitação para idosos e intergeracional “II” - versão de trabalho e base
bibliográfica # 808 Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, março 16, 2022. (61
p.) . (Notar que esta temática, por ser extensa, foi editada
originalmente em duas partes e em dois artigos semanais, mas é agora editada no
DSpace num único documento)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 810 (IV) – Sobre as necessidades
habitacionais mais específicas dos idosos “I” - versão de trabalho e base
bibliográfica – Infohabitar # 810. Lisboa, quarta-feira, março 30, 2022; e
Infohabitar, Ano XVIII, n.º 811 – Sobre as necessidades
habitacionais mais específicas dos idosos “II” - versão de trabalho e base
bibliográfica – Infohabitar # 811. Lisboa, quarta-feira, abril 06, 2022. (22
p.) . (Notar que esta temática, por ser extensa, foi editada
originalmente em duas partes e em dois artigos semanais, mas é agora editada no
DSpace num único documento)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 813 – Acessibilidade
residencial e habitantes fragilizados “I” - versão de trabalho e base
bibliográfica – Infohabitar # 813. Lisboa, quarta-feira, abril 21, 2022; e
Infohabitar, Ano XVIII, n.º 814 – Acessibilidade
residencial e habitantes fragilizados “II” - versão de trabalho e base
bibliográfica – Infohabitar # 814. Lisboa, quarta-feira, abril 27, 2022. (17
p.) . (Notar que esta temática, por ser extensa, foi editada
originalmente em duas partes e em dois artigos semanais, mas é agora editada no
DSpace num único documento)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 815 – Atratividade,
identidade e integração na habitação para idosos I - versão de trabalho e base
bibliográfica – Infohabitar # 815. Lisboa, quarta-feira, maio 11,
2022; e Infohabitar, Ano XVIII, n.º 816 – Atratividade,
identidade e integração na habitação para idosos II - versão de trabalho e base
bibliográfica – Infohabitar # 816. Lisboa, quarta-feira, maio 18, 2022. (26
p.) . (Notar que esta temática, por ser extensa, foi editada
originalmente em duas partes e em dois artigos semanais, mas é agora editada no
DSpace num único documento)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 818 – Espacialidade e
conforto residencial no envelhecimento - versão de trabalho e base
bibliográfica # 818 Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, junho 08, 2022. (14
p.)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 819 – Privacidade e
convívio em ambientes residenciais adequados para idosos - versão de trabalho e
base bibliográfica # 819 Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, junho 15, 2022. (11
p.)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 820 – Domesticidade e
terceira idade - versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica # 820 Infohabitar. Lisboa,
quarta-feira, junho 22, 2022. (17 p.) Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 817 – Lazer, arte,
aprendizagem e envelhecimento - versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica # 817
Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, junho 01, 2022. (18 p.)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 821 – Segurança na
habitação para idosos - versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica # 821
Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, junho 29, 2022. (15 p.)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 822 – Habitação
intergeracional: da adaptabilidade à participação num adequado quadro
arquitetónico I – versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica # 822
infohabitar . Lisboa, quarta-feira, julho 06, 2022; e Infohabitar, Ano XVIII,
n.º 823 – Habitação
intergeracional: da adaptabilidade à participação num adequado quadro
arquitetónico II – versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica # 823
infohabitar . Lisboa, quarta-feira, julho 13, 2022.
(25 p.) (Notar que esta temática, por ser extensa, foi editada
originalmente em duas partes e em dois artigos semanais, mas é agora editada no
DSpace num único documento)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 825 – Velhice e solidão ou
convívio no habitar I – versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica # 825
Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, agosto 03, 2022; e Infohabitar, Ano
XVIII, n.º 826 – Velhice e solidão ou
convívio no habitar II – versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica #
826 Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, agosto 10, 2022. (36 p.) (Notar
que esta temática, por ser extensa, foi editada originalmente em duas partes e
em dois artigos semanais, mas é agora editada no DSpace num único documento)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 833 – Notas sobre o
habitar, a velhice e as demências – versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica # 833
Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, setembro 28, 2022. (26 p.)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 834 – Breves notas sobre o
habitar no final de vida – versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica #
834 Infohabitar. Lisboa, quarta-feira, outubro 12, 2022.
(12 p.)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 836 – Idosos: desafio
crítico e oportunidade I - versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica –
Infohabitar # 836. Lisboa, quarta-feira, outubro 26, 2022;
e Infohabitar, Ano XVIII, n.º 837 – Idosos: desafio
crítico e oportunidade II - versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica –
Infohabitar # 837, Lisboa, quarta-feira, novembro 02,
2022. (22 p.) (Notar que esta temática, por ser extensa,
foi editada originalmente em duas partes e em dois artigos semanais, mas é
agora editada no DSpace num único documento)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 838 – Considerações sobre
direitos e problemas dos idosos – versão de trabalho e base bibliográfica –
Infohabitar # 838. Lisboa, quarta-feira, novembro 09, 2022. (16 p.)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XVIII, n.º 839 – Os idosos e os seus
espaços residenciais I – versão de trabalho e base documental –
Infohabitar # 839, Lisboa, quarta-feira, novembro 16, 2022; Infohabitar, Ano XVIII, n.º
840 – Os idosos e os seus
espaços residenciais II – versão de trabalho e base documental –
Infohabitar # 840, Lisboa, quarta-feira, novembro 23, 2022; Infohabitar, Ano XVIII, n.º
841 – Os idosos e os seus
espaços residenciais III – versão de trabalho e base documental –
Infohabitar # 841, Lisboa, quarta-feira, novembro 30, 2022. (31 p.) (Notar
que esta temática, por ser extensa, foi editada originalmente em três partes e
em três artigos semanais, mas é agora editada no DSpace num único
documento)
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 845 – Caminhos do habitar
quando formos idosos – versão de trabalho e base documental – Infohabitar
# 845 , Lisboa, quarta-feira, 18 de Janeiro de 2023, (14 p.); Artigo
XXIV da série editorial da Infohabitar “PHAI3C – Programa de Habitação
Adaptável e Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/01/caminhos-do-habitar-quando-formos.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 847 – Estudos e temas a
salientar no âmbito da relação entre habitação e envelhecimento – versão de
trabalho e base documental (I) – Infohabitar # 847, Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 8 de fevereiro de 2023 (35 p. partes I e II); Artigo XXV
da série editorial da Infohabitar “PHAI3C – Programa de Habitação
Adaptável e Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/02/estudos-e-temas-salientar-no-ambito-da.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 848 – Estudos e temas a
salientar no âmbito da relação entre habitação e envelhecimento – versão de
trabalho e base documental (II) – Infohabitar # 848, Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 15 de fevereiro de 2023 (35 p. partes I e II); Artigo XXVI
da série editorial da Infohabitar “PHAI3C – Programa de Habitação
Adaptável e Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/02/estudos-e-temas-salientar-no-ambito-da_15.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 849 – Idosos e espaço
urbano – versão de trabalho e base documental – Infohabitar # 849, Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 22 de fevereiro de 2023 (19 p.); Artigo XXVII da série
editorial da Infohabitar “PHAI3C – Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo Controlado”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/02/idosos-e-espaco-urbano-versao-de.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 851 – Idosos e espaços
urbanos de vizinhança – versão de trabalho e base documental – Infohabitar #
851, Lisboa, quarta-feira, 15 de março de 2023 (9 p.); Artigo XXVIII
da série editorial da Infohabitar “PHAI3C – Programa de Habitação
Adaptável e Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/03/idosos-e-espacos-urbanos-de-vizinhanca.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 852 – Importância da
adaptabilidade na habitação para idosos – versão de trabalho e base documental
– Infohabitar # 852, Lisboa, quarta-feira, 22 de março de 2023 (13
p); Artigo XXIX da série editorial da Infohabitar “PHAI3C – Programa
de Habitação Adaptável e Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/03/importancia-da-adaptabilidade-na.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 853 – “Habitação Senior ?”
– versão de trabalho e base documental – Infohabitar # 853, Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 29 de março de 2023 (24 p.); Artigo XXX da série editorial
da Infohabitar “PHAI3C – Programa de Habitação Adaptável e Intergeracional
através de uma Cooperativa a Custo Controlado”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/03/habitacao-senior-versao-de-trabalho-e.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 854 – Apoiar
residencialmente um envelhecimento ativo – versão de trabalho e base documental
– Infohabitar # 854, Lisboa, quarta-feira, 5 de abril de 2023 (29 p.);
Artigo XXXI da série editorial da Infohabitar “PHAI3C – Programa de
Habitação Adaptável e Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/04/apoiar-residencialmente-um.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 855 – Os idosos e o futuro
de uma habitação bem integrada e participada – versão de trabalho e base
documental – Infohabitar # 855, Lisboa, quarta-feira, 19 de abril de 2023 (23
p.); Artigo XXXII da série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de
Habitação Adaptável e Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/04/os-idosos-e-o-futuro-de-uma-habitacao.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 857 – Habitação, integração
etária e intergeracionalidade – versão de trabalho e base documental –
Infohabitar # 857, Lisboa, quarta-feira, 3 de maio de 2023 (11 p.); Artigo XXXIII
da série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C” ; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/05/habitacao-integracao-etaria-e.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 858 – Cooperativas,
coohousing e habitação colaborativa ou participada – versão de trabalho e base
documental – Infohabitar # 858, Lisboa, quarta-feira, 10 de maio de 2023 (10
p.); Artigo XXXIII da série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de
Habitação Adaptável e Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C” ; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/05/cooperativas-coohousing-e-habitacao.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 859 – Fazer da habitação
para idosos uma escolha apetecível – versão de trabalho e base documental –
Infohabitar # 859, Lisboa, quarta-feira, 17 de maio de 2023 (17 p.); Artigo
XXXIV da série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável
e Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C” ; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/05/fazer-da-habitacao-para-idosos-uma.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 860 – Uma habitação muito
adequada para pessoas idosas – versão de trabalho e base documental –
Infohabitar # 860, Lisboa, quarta-feira, 24 de maio de 2023 (13 p.); Artigo XXXV
da série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/05/uma-habitacao-muito-adequada-para.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 868 – Renovadas soluções residenciais para as
pessoas idosas – versão de
trabalho e base documental # 868
Infohabitar, Lisboa, quarta-feira, 19 de julho de 2023 (26 p.); Artigo XXXVI
da série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/07/renovadas-solucoes-residenciais-para-as.html
. Infohabitar, Ano
XIX, n.º 869 – Tipologias residenciais etariamente dirigidas –
versão de trabalho e base documental # 869 Infohabitar, Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 26 de julho de 2023 (28 p.); Artigo XXXVII da
série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/07/tipologias-residenciais-etariamente.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 870 – Tipologias residenciais para pessoas idosas: um
amplo leque de soluções – versão de
trabalho e base documental # 870 Infohabitar , Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 2 de agosto de 2023 (24 p.); Artigo XXXVIII da
série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/08/tipologias-residenciais-para-pessoas.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 871 – Aspetos estruturantes da tipologia residencial
intergeracional – versão de trabalho
e base documental # 871 Infohabitar , Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 9 de agosto de 2023 (14 p.); Artigo XXXIX da
série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/08/aspetos-estruturantes-da-tipologia.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 872 – Facetas tipológicas específicas da habitação
intergeracional – versão de trabalho
e base documental # 872 Infohabitar , Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 16 de agosto de 2023 (23 p.); Artigo XL da série
editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/08/facetas-tipologicas-especificas-da.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 873 – Aspetos específicos da conceção residencial para
idosos e fragilizados – versão de trabalho e base documental # 873 Infohabitar,
Lisboa, quarta-feira, 23 de agosto de 2023 (26 p.); Artigo XLI da
série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/08/aspetos-especificos-da-concecao.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 874 – Agrupamentos e tipos habitacionais específicos
para pessoas com demência – versão de
trabalho e base bibliográfica # 874 Infohabitar , Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 30 de agosto de 2023 (16 p.); Artigo XLII da série editorial da
Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e Intergeracional através
de uma Cooperativa a Custo Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/08/8agrupamentos-e-tipos-habitacionais.html
. Infohabitar,
Ano XIX, n.º 875 – Intergeracionalidade e convívio na habitação –
versão de trabalho e base documental # 875 Infohabitar, Lisboa,
quarta-feira, 6 de setembro de 2023 (38 p.); Artigo XLIII da
série editorial da Infohabitar – “Programa de Habitação Adaptável e
Intergeracional através de uma Cooperativa a Custo
Controlado” “PHAI3C”; http://infohabitar.blogspot.com/2023/09/intergeracionalidade-e-convivio-na.html
Notas
editoriais gerais:
(i)
Embora a edição dos artigos editados na Infohabitar seja ponderada, caso a
caso, pelo corpo editorial, no sentido de se tentar assegurar uma linha de
edição marcada por um significativo nível técnico e científico, as opiniões
expressas nos artigos e comentários apenas traduzem o pensamento e as posições
individuais dos respectivos autores desses artigos e comentários, sendo
portanto da exclusiva responsabilidade dos mesmos autores.
(ii)
No mesmo sentido, de natural responsabilização dos autores dos artigos, a
utilização de quaisquer elementos de ilustração dos mesmos artigos, como , por
exemplo, fotografias, desenhos, gráficos, etc., é, igualmente, da exclusiva
responsabilidade dos respetivos autores – que deverão referir as
respetivas fontes e obter as necessárias autorizações.
(iii)
Para se tentar assegurar o referido e adequado nível técnico e científico da
Infohabitar e tendo em conta a ocorrência de uma quantidade muito significativa
de comentários "automatizados" e/ou que nada têm a ver com a
tipologia global dos conteúdos temáticos tratados na Infohabitar e pelo
GHabitar, a respetiva edição da revista condiciona a edição dos comentários à
respetiva moderação, pelos editores; uma moderação que se circunscreve, apenas
e exclusivamente, à verificação de que o comentário é pertinente no sentido do
teor editorial da revista; naturalmente , podendo ser de teor positivo ou
negativo em termos de eventuais críticas, e sendo editado tal e qual foi
recebido na edição.
(iv)
Oportunamente haverá novidades no sentido do gradual, mas expressivo,
incremento das exigências editoriais da Infohabitar, da diversificação do seu
corpo editorial e do aprofundamento da sua utilidade no apoio à qualidade
arquitectónica residencial, com especial enfoque na habitação de baixo custo.
Casos de Referência Internacionais mais Específicos
e aplicáveis à Habitação Intergeracional: Parte II – infohabitar # 977
Informa-se que para aceder (fazer download) do mais recente
Catálogo Interativo da Infohabitar, que está tematicamente organizado em mais
de 20 temas e tem links diretos para os 960 artigos da Infohabitar,
existentes em janeiro de 2025 (documento pdf ilustrado e com mais de 80
pg), usar o link seguinte:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FGRm5wfskdl54Lf7BhoDTmojcBDiveSf/view?usp=sharing
Infohabitar, ano XXII, n.º 977
Edição:
quarta-feira 20 de Maio de 2026
Editor:
António Baptista Coelho
Arquitecto/ESBAL
– Escola Superior de Belas Artes de Lisboa –, doutor em Arquitectura/FAUP –
Faculdade de Arquitectura da Universidade do Porto –, Investigador Principal
com Habilitação em Arquitectura e Urbanismo pelo LNEC.
Os
aspetos técnicos do lançamento da Infohabitar e o apoio continuado à sua edição
foram proporcionados por diversas pessoas, salientando-se, naturalmente, a
constante disponibilidade e os conhecimentos técnicos do doutor José Romana
Baptista Coelho.
Revista
do GHabitar (GH) Associação Portuguesa para a Promoção da Qualidade
Habitacional Infohabitar – Associação com sede na Federação Nacional de
Cooperativas de Habitação Económica (FENACHE).

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