Designing Inclusive Communities
When it comes to designing housing for the senior population (DiMella Shaffer has designed other senior living projects throughout Massachusetts, and a new lifecare community, The Baldwin, in New Hampshire), Saad broadens the scope to include dementia-friendly spaces.
“Whether it’s a bus stop or a supermarket or a city hall, embedding dementia-friendly principles is very important,” he said. “So The Pryde, for example, has a good amount of dementia-friendly principles applied to the building although it’s independent living affordable housing. We use color, contrast, familiarity of objects and clarity of layouts to allow people to easily navigate their environment.”
Healthy communities are diverse communities, which includes diversity of age. “No matter how you slice the different groups, even 62-plus is a diverse group of people — you have people who are 62 and people who are 90,” he said. “That is a large gap. They want different things.”
Speaking about The Baldwin lifecare community, Saad said it’s a pedestrian-friendly environment based on the principle of placemaking, a people-centered approach to urban planning.
“The street outside has the amenities open up onto the street to allow people to flow in and out. It’s next to a beer hall, a clinic and other amenities on the main streets,” he explained.
Allowing people from different parts of the neighborhood to spontaneously meet is a desirable feature of this type of community planning. “Sometimes I like to call them ‘collisions,’” said Saad. “Like when I meet my neighbor, I don’t plan for that, but it happens. And there’s some energy in the conversation – ‘hey, how are you? what are you doing?’ [Creating] these relationships is what I think architecture and planning has the power to do.”
In April, Saad was a featured presenter for the Global Ageing Network Leadership program and spoke on “Supporting Diverse Elders.” When asked if there are any community housing projects around the world that have inspired him, Saad said, “I think the European Nordic countries have put more investment into this social model of housing that includes older adults with younger people, as well as dementia villages that are supportive.” He cited the successes of The Hogeweyk, a dementia village in the Netherlands as well as Village Landais Alzheimer in France.
Philippe Saad will be speaking on LGBTQ housing and diverse communities at the Global Ageing Network’s “Age-Readiness for the Global Community: A One-Day Summit” prior to the LeadingAge Annual Meeting, Oct. 25-28 in Philadelphia, PA.
The summit will advance age-readiness across societies, envisioned as ensuring older persons have the supports they need, their voices are heard, and they can fully participate in community life. The summit will bring together experts from a range of disciplines including health, urban planning and environmental design, transportation, education, sports, entrepreneurship, government, providers, and technology to explore how integration across disciplines, spanning formal systems and everyday practice can support older adults to live well, be heard, and fully engage in community life.
Registration for the summit will open in mid-Summer. More information about the LeadingAge Annual Meeting is available here.