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March 2006

Universal Design Exhibit Premiers at the USC Institute for Genetic Medicine Art Gallery

By Athan Bezaitis

Imagine a bathing area that is just as easy to access for a teenager as it is for her eighty-seven year-old grandmother.  Or a modern kitchen -- with all the amenities -- that is both fashionable and functional for a lucky couple celebrating their 60th anniversary.  That’s the concept behind Universal Design, the development of products such as furnishings, appliances and living spaces that promotes equal opportunity for use by people of all ages with or without disabilities.

“When universal design is done correctly, it is invisible,” said Roberta Null, curator of Universal Design: Lifespan Collaborative Strategies, an exhibit running at the USC Institute for Genetic Medicine (IGM) Art Gallery from March 12 through June 28.  

The exhibit, co-hosted by the USC Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontology Center and the USC IGM Art Gallery Volunteers, opened this Sunday, March 12, with presentations from Ed Woods, President of the City of Los Angeles Council on Aging and Jules Draznin, first vice president of the Los Angeles County Committee on Aging.  The two speakers addressed Universal Design as an essential component for improving the quality of life, independence, health and dignity for senior citizens throughout the greater Los Angeles region. 

On display were representations created by builders, designers and re-modelers who have developed products using the concepts of Universal Design for the ever-changing needs of households.  Such innovations include a flat, spacious shower space with an adjustable bench and handheld spout, a rotating shelf, designed using the same principle as a Ferris wheel, and brail artwork, both functional for the user and elegant to the observer. 

Many of the imaginative products received praise from visitors. “This shelf is ideal for people of all heights, and varying levels of strength,” said Marina Makri, referring to the design of the rotating shelf.  Ms. Makri works as an interior designer and was on hand to see the latest technological developments in household furnishings.  “Universal Design is a new concept to me, but the more I see the more important it is to consider for my clients.”

Another popular item was the mechanical dish sink, which adjusted to the height of the user.  A simple push of a button mounted on the side lowered the sink to wheelchair level.

“Notice the variation in colors between the edge of the sink’s shelf and the counter top,” said Ms. Null, pointing to a yellow strip just below the red countertop that bordered the perimeter. “As people age they have trouble distinguishing countertops, toilet seats and bathtubs, which are frequently the same color as the walls.”

Universal Design is seen as a major step towards adapting to the aging population of the nation and the world.  It is estimated by the year 2050, nearly two billion people will be age 60 or older.  In the United States, fueled by the huge baby boom generation, the population of seniors is expected to double by 2020, the oldest of whom are turning 60 this year. In the city of Los Angeles alone, there are thousands of people who are elderly or caring for older persons; nearly 100,000 households in the city have someone who is at least 65 years of age. 

“Faced with the prospect of forced dependence and an inadequate number of specialized care facilities, this exhibit supports independence for our elders,” said Andrus Gerontology Center Director of Communications Maria Henke.

For more information: http://www.uscigm.org

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Adapting your home to meet mobility challenges
Even modest changes can make a small bathroom workable

by Sandra Fleishman, Washington Post

Washington -- Stephen Bennett doesn't need a wheelchair-accessible bathroom. But the president and chief executive of United Cerebral Palsy has a lot of friends and professional acquaintances who do and says "when I have friends over, I want them to be able to go to the bathroom in my house."

Bennett, though, has found the process of getting one frustrating. He eventually found a 100-year-old house in Washington that could be outfitted with a ramp to the back door, but his plan to tackle the first-floor bathroom was delayed by contractor problems and pressing repairs. An architect's estimate that fully modifying the powder room would cost $9,000 "also kind of stopped me in my tracks," he said.

It's a problem that many Americans may find familiar.

As Baby Boomers hit their 60s, many are learning that even something as simple as getting into their own bathrooms becomes quite difficult if they suddenly need a wheelchair to get around.

There are "more than 54 million Americans living with disabilities, an aging population expected to reach 70 million by 2030 and Baby Boomers concerned about finding homes they can grow old in as an alternative to nursing homes and retirement communities," James Williams, president and chief executive of Easter Seals, said last summer in a statement advocating accessibility. His call for action came on the 15th anniversary of the Americans With Disabilities Act.

Easter Seals and the Century 21 real estate firm have put together a checklist and resource guide for making homes accessible. Other guides are being published nationally and locally, because virtually none of America's houses were built to accommodate those on wheels.

Even lately, during the age of the mega-mansion, new homes aren't being built to make it easy for wheelchair users. Not even in active-adult communities. Sometimes doorways and hallways in new construction are wider than the standard 30 and 36 inches, but not as a rule. New higher-end homes, though, sometimes offer the potential for widening doorways and later adding features such as roll-in showers or elevators.

The situation is something of a paradox: At the same time that most builders resist adding "aging in place" features to new houses, most older Americans are saying they want to grow old at home. About 84 percent of AARP members surveyed last year said they want to remain at home as long as possible. About 87 percent, however, acknowledged that their homes will not meet their needs as they grow older.

And small bathrooms are a sizable part of the problem, accessibility experts say. If a wheelchair user can't fit into the bathroom, or there's not enough room for a user and an attendant, or a way to carve space from other rooms, it can mean moving to a new home or to alternative care.

The good news, those who specialize in accessible design say, is that small bathrooms can be modified without spending a fortune to accommodate many situations, although modest changes may not allow full accessibility for every type of disability. And the better news, they say, is that the more interest there is, the more the homebuilding industry may respond.

John Canning of Reston, Va., says he's proof of the potential. He just had a tiny powder room modified to help him cope with advancing multiple sclerosis. "It's really made a difference, and it wasn't all that expensive," said Canning, retired owner of an office coffee service.

Canning hired the same remodeling firm that he used seven years ago to redo the main living spaces in a three-story townhouse. The latest work cost about $6,000, including the new fixtures, tile work, flooring and painting.

For the first renovation, Butler Brothers Corp. of Clifton, Va., "did the usual stuff -- grab bars in the bathrooms and the elevator -- but I also had them do over the master bath entirely, at their suggestion," Canning said. Vince Butler, who chairs the Remodelors Council of the National Association of Home Builders, is an advocate of "universal design," design that provides as much accessibility as possible to as many people as possible.

The contractor gutted the master bathroom, which was a bit bigger than the standard 5 by 8 feet, and added space from an adjoining closet to make room for a roll-in shower, instead of the tub. The shower has grab bars and a handheld showerhead as well as a regular one. The sink is set up without a vanity cabinet beneath, so he can roll his chair right up to it.

"Everything has come in wonderfully handy at this point, obviously particularly the shower," said Canning, whose disease was diagnosed when he was 40 and who now, at 55, uses a powered wheelchair. Canning says he is "lucky enough to still be able to stand up, if I lock my knees, as long as I am holding on to something."

But recently, he decided to also make over the small downstairs bathroom "because I couldn't get into it with the wheelchair and that caused problems."

Such upgrades can be a relatively inexpensive solution for some.

"The answer is yes, but," said Richard Duncan, senior project manager with the Center for Universal Design at North Carolina State University, when asked if tiny spaces can be modified.

The "but," he said, depends on the needs of the person who is going to use the bathroom, the extent of the disability, the space and the budget available.

"Those kinds of bathrooms are very challenging," Duncan said. "In most cases, with one that is smaller than 5 by 7 (feet), you will have to make it bigger, by stealing space from an adjacent closet or hallway."

Duncan and others say a 5-by-8 space is generally considered the minimum space if a homeowner wants to fit an accessible toilet, sink and roll-in shower; a 5-by-5 space is the absolute minimum for a sink and toilet. Most wheelchairs need a clear 5-foot circle to make a turn.

The typical master bath in the United States, from the beginnings of suburbia in the late 1940s until the last decade or so of mansionization, has been about 5 feet by 7 or 8 feet. The traditional powder room is even smaller.

Still, "you can do it," said Takoma Park, Md., architect John P.S. Salmen, who wrote "The Do-Able Renewable Home" for AARP in 1991. "We have a whole bunch of ideas that can be done for low to no cost on how to stay in your house as you age, including modifying bathrooms." The book was updated in 2000.

Among the simplest ideas, Salmen said, is having the bathroom door open outward, instead of inward.

"The width of the door also depends on how you go in," Salmen said. "If you can go straight through the door, without having to make a turn, then I personally think you can get through a 30-inch door."

Even a small bathroom can have a roll-in shower, with no threshold or curb to block passage, if the floor is rebuilt to slant toward a drain, if the whole space is tiled and if the owner doesn't mind that a fold-up shower seat and the toilet might get wet, said Arlington, Va., architect Kim Beasley.

Beasley, head of Beasley Architectural Group and former national architecture director for the Paralyzed Veterans of America in Washington, co-wrote a guide to accessible design for the PVA in 1999. An updated version, expected this month, shows a very small bathroom that Beasley modified. The book also looks at a wider array of designs, including accessible outdoor rooms and second homes.

While the federal government's codes are meant to address the needs of all disabled Americans, "there aren't codes for private homes," said architect Thomas Davies Jr. of Annapolis, Md., who co-authored the PVA's design guidebook.

"It's really hard to generalize what will work," Davies said. "If someone has an attendant, then the bathroom has to accommodate two people. If you have arthritis, you may need a certain type of arrangement."

The differences affect not only the type of construction but also the price.

Beasley said he can design an accessible bathroom that runs between $8,000 and $12,000.

Making a bathroom fully accessible, with a no-threshold shower, new tiles and flooring and a full-floor waterproof membrane, can easily run $25,000 and up, depending on the finish, Butler said. But just making a bathroom "much more accessible and easier to use" typically runs about $12,000 to $15,000.

Architects and accessibility experts caution that homeowners should consider the big picture before embarking on one piece of the accessibility puzzle.

"You have to ask yourself: 'What are the long-term goals of the owner?' " Salmen said. "Are they going to stay in the house long enough to make it cost-effective? Are they going to live long enough to take advantage of the changes? What is the individual's physical condition, their age, the physical condition of their house, the value of their house and the location of the house in a neighborhood? Is it, for instance, in a neighborhood where they can get to critical amenities if they aren't able to drive? And what is their financial situation? ...

"The really accessible house would have no steps and would be wide enough throughout for a wheelchair. In some cases, it's not worth it to modify the house you're in."

Lynn Anderholm, an Alexandria, Va., homeowner, hired Beasley's firm to modify her house three years ago. The 52-year-old has had Parkinson's disease for about 12 years and had lived there for about 20 years without modifications.

Anderholm got a variance to add a first-floor accessible bedroom and an accessible powder room, and then made the second-floor bedroom and master bath wheelchair-friendly. The house now has wide hallways and 36-inch doorways in most rooms.

"If it were up to me," Anderholm said, "all builders would put in 36-inch doorways and at least 48-inch hallways. It's not that difficult to do in new houses, but if you try and do that once the house is there, it's very, very difficult."

Some industry officials, however, say surveys of home buyers show that they generally don't want features identified with aging or disabilities, even if they don't cost much more.

Buyers "just don't want to think about it" until they have to, said Jim Lapides, communications manager for the Remodelors Council. "It's a psychological issue," said Gopal Ahluwalia, research director for the National Association of Home Builders.

But builders also know that bathrooms are the second-most-popular remodeling project, after kitchens, that remodeling is a $10 billion-a-year business and that there is growing interest in aging in place from some very vocal corners, such as AARP.

Source:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/03/08/HOGDPHJ1G81.DTL

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Boomers' desire to 'age in place' driving new home trends

by Judy Harkleroad (Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal)

There's a new marketing segment trend in the home building and remodeling industry going after the "aging-in-place" crowd. The target audience is the 76 million baby boomers who are preparing for retirement in a single home.

Aging in place means building and remodeling homes so this group, age 50 and older, can stay in their homes comfortably, safely and independently as they age, regardless of physical challenges.

The aging-in-place marketing trend dominated talk at the 2006 International Builders' Show & tecHOMExpo, sponsored by the National Association of Home Builders last month in Florida. More than 1,600 exhibitors showed off their latest building products, many of which target the baby boomer population.

From larger faucet handles to wider doors to fake lawns, baby boomers are looking for products that are easy to use, easy to navigate and easy to maintain over decades of in-place living.

"People want to live in houses, not institutions," said William Owens, NAHB guest speaker and president of Owens Construction in Columbus, Ohio. "And the idea in aging-in-place homes is you can't tell it's for the aging."

Easy to use, easy to maneuver

With ever-increasing physical challenges, baby boomers want easy-to-use products, such as better lighting, bigger light controls, easy-grip handles and cabinet hardware, adjustable shower heads, seats and bars and bathtubs with textured bottoms.

"People want aesthetically pleasing options that are standard," said Bill Pavilonis, marketing manager for Sterling Plumbing, a division of Kohler Co. "And the aging of the population creates the demand for such products."

Replacing bathtubs with showers is possible now, thanks to Sterling's new bathtub-replacement system that easily converts a standard tub into a shower with a slip-resistant bottom surface. The distinctive feature is the drain, which does not have to be moved, making it an easy and inexpensive project, Mr. Pavilonis said.

With increased mobility challenges, easy-to-navigate features are must-haves, too. They include low-step showers, wide doorways, first-floor bathrooms, hard flooring, low-pile carpeting, electric stair lifts and even in-home elevators, which are seeing increasing sales.

Sterling has come up with a half-inch shower step, virtually eliminating the step into the shower, Mr. Pavilonis said.

And to eliminate steps to a home's various levels, residential elevators have become a tremendous market in the last five to six years, showing 10 percent to 20 percent growth each year, said Stacie Sorenson, marketing director at Wisconsin-based Waupaca Elevator Co., founded in 1957. Elevators can be retrofitted or installed in new construction.

"Builders are offering them as an option now with new construction. Homes with elevators draw a wider variety of buyers," she said. "Any age level can benefit from a home elevator, from the high school student on crutches to young mothers with babies and strollers to older people with walking issues."

For new construction, Waupaca's elevators can have up to six stops, from basic to custom design, and can lift up to 50 feet, Ms. Sorenson said. An average unit price is $20,000, depending on product type, geographic location, building codes and labor costs.

Easy-to-maintain products

Zero maintenance is a critical part of the aging-in-place concept, Mr. Owens said. Many baby boomers have two homes and want peace of mind and security while they are away, and they want fewer home repair projects both at their permanent and vacation homes.

While the younger, 30-something Generation X homeowners focus on renovating interiors, baby boomers concentrate more on exteriors, said Lori McCreary, director of marketing communications for Pittsburgh-based Alcoa, maker of aluminum and composite building exterior products.

"Baby boomers are more concerned with energy efficiency and low maintenance," she said. "And the backyard has become the new living room. So the outside of the house is very important now."

With Alcoa's new DreamColor maintenance-free siding, homeowners can choose from 700 colors and several different widths, shapes and textures, creating a custom look, Ms. McCreary said. And because Alcoa's line of Structure siding is insulated with foam, the homeowner gets a $500 energy tax credit from the federal government.

"It never needs painting and the color doesn't fade," she said. "And it never molds or mildews. The homeowner can take a garden hose to it every now and then."

In 2005, $233 billion was spent on remodeling.

Source: http://sanjose.bizjournals.com/sanjose/stories/2006/02/27/focus3.html?page=1

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