Ev
E. van de Zande
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Home in Houtwijk
Exploring Age-Friendly Housing Design
This research explores how architectural and environmental design can support a sense of home and increase the willingness of older adults to relocate. It shows that relocation decisions are strongly influenced not only by practical housing needs, but also by emotional and social attachments to home, such as comfort, autonomy, safety, privacy, and social connection.
The findings are based on both literature and a workshop with residents in Houtwijk. These show that older adults value comfort, gardens, storage space, accessibility, and a safe and familiar neighbourhood. At the same time, they are open to moving when new housing supports these same qualities.
The research translates these insights into spatial design principles and applies them in the concept of the inside–outside world, which balances privacy and social interaction through gradual transitions. It concludes that while architecture cannot decide whether people move, it can make moving more attractive by creating environments that support a sense of home. ...
The findings are based on both literature and a workshop with residents in Houtwijk. These show that older adults value comfort, gardens, storage space, accessibility, and a safe and familiar neighbourhood. At the same time, they are open to moving when new housing supports these same qualities.
The research translates these insights into spatial design principles and applies them in the concept of the inside–outside world, which balances privacy and social interaction through gradual transitions. It concludes that while architecture cannot decide whether people move, it can make moving more attractive by creating environments that support a sense of home. ...
This research explores how architectural and environmental design can support a sense of home and increase the willingness of older adults to relocate. It shows that relocation decisions are strongly influenced not only by practical housing needs, but also by emotional and social attachments to home, such as comfort, autonomy, safety, privacy, and social connection.
The findings are based on both literature and a workshop with residents in Houtwijk. These show that older adults value comfort, gardens, storage space, accessibility, and a safe and familiar neighbourhood. At the same time, they are open to moving when new housing supports these same qualities.
The research translates these insights into spatial design principles and applies them in the concept of the inside–outside world, which balances privacy and social interaction through gradual transitions. It concludes that while architecture cannot decide whether people move, it can make moving more attractive by creating environments that support a sense of home.
The findings are based on both literature and a workshop with residents in Houtwijk. These show that older adults value comfort, gardens, storage space, accessibility, and a safe and familiar neighbourhood. At the same time, they are open to moving when new housing supports these same qualities.
The research translates these insights into spatial design principles and applies them in the concept of the inside–outside world, which balances privacy and social interaction through gradual transitions. It concludes that while architecture cannot decide whether people move, it can make moving more attractive by creating environments that support a sense of home.