Accessible Homes could be the Norm for Future Homes – PART 1

Stephen Bolling

You might have a key fob that automatically turns off your car’s security system and unlocks the door.  Most drivers with newer cars do.  Despite its increased cost over a manual key it has become a standard in the auto industry.

You might have a remote that opens your garage door and turns on the garage light.  Most homeowners, especially those in the suburbs, do.  And very few would opt to save a few dollars by selecting a manual door, even with the added incentive of reducing the household’s energy bill.

But here’s something you don’t have.  A key fob that triggers a sensor by your front door, turns on the porch light, turns off the security system, and unlocks and opens your front door.  Some homeowners actually do have similar devices.  Today they’re expensive, but if installed on a large-scale in new developments they could be as common as your car’s key fob or your garage door’s remote.

The entry sensor is the type of product that was designed out of necessity to help disabled homeowners.  Creating products and homes for people with special needs is not new, but the growing industry is coming up with solutions that are attractive to anyone and could be in many homes by the end of the decade.  Installing them in greater numbers will drive the prices down and owner enthusiasm will encourage developers to provide them as standard products in new homes.  There is a need and a profit to be made.

ADT door sensor unlocks and opens door.

 

As people mature their homes need to adapt to their health needs.  Building homes that meet that need requires greater levels of skills and knowledge.  Gone are the days of products that looked as if they belong in the emergency room of the hospital.  Teams of medical and design professionals are coming together to create products and spaces that are warm, attractive, exciting and desired by both able and disabled users.  They are being designed to be the norm for all home environments and in turn they are increasing the desirability and value of the home.

All disabilities and clients are not the same and cannot merely follow disability standards.  From arthritis (the most common functional disability in the United States) to back problems, heart disease, respiratory disease, learning disabilities, speech impairments and deteriorating conditions such as ALS, MS and spinal cord injuries it is not uncommon for most homes to house someone with a disability at some time.

As people get older their vision deteriorates, their balance and coordination decreases and their strength and endurance diminishes.  Memory loss requires special considerations such as glass or open cupboards to reduce misplaced items.  23% of people between the age of 45 and 54 have a disability.  That percentage rises to 45.4% for ages 65 to 69.   This spikes to 72.5% for those over 75.  3.3 million people use wheelchairs or similar devices.

Developers should build homes with solutions that meet these challenges because the need is there and there is a profit in providing something new, useful and exciting.

In my previous article I wrote that for the real estate market to rebound the housing industry needs to sell a newer, better product.  They need to find their equivalent of the iPhone, Blue-Ray or Bluetooth.  Here are some products that help the disabled but could be used useful to anyone and be attractive selling tools for new homes:

A kitchen with self-cleaning or adjustable height counters, cabinets on rails, remote-controlled appliances with automatic shut offs and ovens with side-hinged doors.

Remote-controlled adjustable counters by Baselift

Portable grab bars for the injured or sick and towel racks, toilet paper holders and bathtub soap trays that hold a person’s weight and can be used as permanent grab bars.

Shower heads with adjustable heights and bathroom vanities on casters that pull out from under the sinks.

Pull-down clothes poles in the wardrobe closet and lighting that turns off when the door is closed.

Wider doors, space-saving pocket doors and easy sliding windows

Stairs with contrasting color at the nose and double height railings for kids and adults.

Gates at the top of stairs for toddlers and those with balance needs.

Today’s homes need to reduce energy costs but they will also need to provide for the elderly, the sick, the injured and the permanently disabled.   Homes will need to make our daily lives easier and less stressful.

Invisia Collection with Integrated Support Rail by HealthCraft

Sources:

Specialized Home Design (Scott Anderle, Physical Therapist): http://www.shdesigns.net/

Institute for Human-Centered Design (Kathy Gips, Director of Training): http://www.adaptenv.org/

Pierce Lamb Architects (Deborah Pierce, AIA): http://www.piercelambarchitects.com/

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: http://www.cdc.gov/

The Center for Universal Design at North Carolina State University: http://www.ncsu.edu/www/ncsu/design/sod5/cud/

Data Accountability Center:  https://www.ideadata.org/default.asp

Trace Center, University of Wisconsin: http://trace.wisc.edu/

Products:

Remote-controlled adjustable counters by Baselift: http://universal-design-products.com/baselift_worktop_lift.htm

Invisia Collection with Integrated Support Rail by HealthCraft:  http://www.healthcraftproducts.com

Stephen Bolling

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Newer, better homes needed to draw consumers

Stephen Bolling

Everyone is aware the home market is in trouble. This has created mass lay-off in architecture and construction offices and brought less work for manufacturers of building products. Some firms have gone down from 100 employees to 10, others have folded completely. The main problem is not so much the economy, home prices are low, and mortgage rates are historically low. The main problem right now is that the public doesn’t have an incentive to purchase homes.

Its unfair and too easy a target to always blame the economy. People ARE spending money. Consumers are buying higher-quality and more fuel-efficient cars, they’re buying electronic and communication devices that make their life easier, iPhone and iPads, they’re spending extra to watch 3D movies at the IMAX, they’re buying HDTV’s and Blu-Ray DVD’s. Not just the wealthy, the middle income and sometimes low income, and they all have one thing in common…they’re savvy; they want high-quality and cutting-edge technology to make their lives easier.

Consumers want better, they want what’s new, and they want to be at the forefront of new technology that will lower their energy bills and make their lives easier preparing food in the kitchen, bathrooms easier to clean and use less water and spaces where they can multi-task, work from their computer and take care of their kids. What they are shown instead are homes that are similar to those from the 90’s, the 80’s and even the 70’s. Homes are still sticks, stucco and drywall with no relation to the environment, the sun or the breezes. Despite well-meaning programs like LEED and EnergyStar, the bottom line today is how cheap it will be for the developer to build, not how much you will benefit from lower energy costs. In today’s economy that certainly is true. Mass produced homes are money pits and the public knows it. The homes being built provide space, often too much space, and often too little where its needed most. People want efficiency in space but also in how that space operates and what that space provides the consumer.

The housing industry needs to find their iPhone, their Blue-Ray, they need to utilize technology like Bluetooth is utilized in communications. People will pay, and pay more, if they feel they’re getting something for their money that’s different and better than what was on the market last year. People like the idea of lower energy bills, less heating and cooling repairs, and homes that don’t feel like warehouses. And they like the idea of homes that make their lives less stressful. A home that is actually working for them is less stressful.

Alternative materials used in construction such as insulated panels, insulated concrete blocks and straw bale significantly lower energy bills and also provide much safer structures in fire. Initial costs are higher but the quality and performance make up for it. Grey water and rain barrels are items added by the homeowner after market, they see the value in it, why aren’t developers providing these? Developers offer buildings with LEED verification and awards that state the homes are environmentally responsible. But much of that reward might be due to things such as being close to a bus stop the owner never uses or by the amount of people the developer is able to cram onto a lot. LEED can be used as an indicator that homes are being built with an intention to be environmentally sensitive and lower energy costs, but as it is used today, LEED is and has always been more valuable to the developer than the owner. The owner wants real tangible products that make their life better financially or efficiently. They want to see the results if not daily, at least seasonally.

The industry will provide green buildings if there is an incentive from the building department or other government agency but they need to start providing items that will encourage people to buy. These incentives are good, and they might make the difference for some people, but the architecture and construction industries response to consumer needs and demands, not the government, will ultimately drive the built economy. Too many architecture and construction firms are stubbornly in their comfort zone. They don’t want to incorporate new ideas, they don’t want to keep up with other industries and technology and public demand unless required by code. They want to sell the same thing they’ve always sold and slap a green label on it. People are beginning to tell the difference between a label and actual improvements. They’re waiting for the industry to provide something new.

Stephen Bolling

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Experience, Participate, Regenerate!

Stephen Bolling

By now you have heard about, read about, seen and probably even purchased sustainable products.  You might have bought a recycled bag from the grocery store, a fluorescent light bulb from the hardware store or even a hybrid vehicle from the car dealer.  Your house may have recycled insulation, double-pane windows or Energy Star appliances.  Sustainability relates to recycling, energy efficiency, conservation and a variety of green issues.

In design, especially building design, sustainability addresses efficiency by putting less demand on the natural environment.  This is a good start when thinking about building, restoring or remodeling a home, business or even an entire community.  But we can do better.  A regenerative approach to solutions looks for ways to restore, renew or revitalize using a site’s own sources of energy and materials and by integrating the built environment with nature, not only taking less from nature…but giving back…and creating new resources.

Regenerative design demonstrates that by having the built environment and its inhabitants actively participate with nature we can help renew the health of the surrounding ecological system.  This creates a healthy environment so that we can all live healthier lives.

RegenerativeHomes ™ explores options to conserve energy, water and materials in your home or business.  Learn helpful tips, important laws and financial incentives.  Learn how best to protect your home from wildfire.  Learn about new products and which ones work the best.  Learn how to save money and where to find jobs and investments in new technology.  Please subscribe in the comment box, your e-mail is not made public.  All comments are screened, if you would not like your comments made public just state so in the comment.  You can also subscribe using the Entries RSS feed.

Stephen Bolling

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Going Green? Now its time to upgrade by GOING BLUE!

The Gift of Water by biosculpture artist Jackie Brookner

Stephen Bolling

It’s great you’re going green, but with so many alternative materials and energy-efficient products on the market its time to be more savvy.  Cutting edge thinkers are Going Blue!  Many people are doing what they can to green their home, green their practices and green their lifestyle but often see little in return outside the knowledge that they are making the world a better place to live.  Long-term investment has often been the phrase associated with sustainability, alternative energy and living green.

Is there a way for these investments to produce more value?  The answer is yes but the world will need to upgrade from thinking green to thinking blue. The term “blue economy” is known globally as an economic alternative to greening one’s business or lifestyle. A blue economy grades the functional success of sustainable practices and implements those that bring down annual overhead costs, create more jobs or produce marketable products. They create systems with clearly defined boundaries and analyze how they perform with other systems. The bottom line is that they function now, not later, and have a real measurable value.

One way of accomplishing a blue economy is finding or developing new technologies.  Gunter Pauli created the first ecological factory which opened in Belgium.  The factory is made entirely from recycled and recyclable materials, recycles waste water, has a roof top garden that insulates the building and grass banks and reed beds around the factory to blend in with surrounding nature.  He also created the first zero-emissions industrial park which was built-in Tennessee and founded the Zero Emissions Research Initiative where he designs non-polluting manufacturing processes.  As an example he cites how vortex technology is used to purify water:  “A vortex can remove air, salt and other impurities using only the force of gravity. Vortex technology allows the water that flushes toilets on the 10th floor to be reused just one or two floors below, thus reducing by a factor of 10 the water wasted flushing toilets.”

The blueprint of a blue economy is an ecosystem as found in nature, a network of living organisms that interact with every other element in their local environment. Fritjof Capra is the systems theorist who wrote THE TAO OF PHYSICS and THE WEB OF LIFE where he combined physics and mysticism to explain the mysteries of life.  In his 2002 book THE HIDDEN CONNECTIONS: INTEGRATING THE BIOLOGICAL, COGNITIVE, AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF LIFE INTO A SCIENCE OF SUSTAINABILITY, Fritjof outlines a plan for designing ecologically sustainable communities and technologies.  The cornerstone of Capra’s plan is that systems need to be alive and interact with other systems and human societies and institutions need to pattern themselves after the way life itself works.  Much like organic gardening, the built environment can be produced from recycled product and be recycled after its own use. It will be sensitive to the environment because like gardening, that is part of its cycle.

From Gunter Pauli’s recently published book THE BLUE ECONOMY – 10 YEARS, 100 INNOVATIONS, 100 MILLION JOBS, “Energy is never an objective on its own, but a means to an end.  Most of the time energy brings food and water, creates housing and facilitates transport and promotes health.  Ecosystems generate far more efficiently than our man-made manufactured process.”

Our built and natural environment needs to interact as a cohesive ecosystem, a living organism, recycling from its past and recycling itself into the future and with each step evolving into something more relative financially and environmentally.  It is no longer cutting edge to reduce the demand on natural resources or decrease utility demands.  The new gauge is the positive impact buildings have on the environment and their value to the ecosystem of which it is a part.  The sustainable practices we adopt need to demonstrate real value in our day-to-day life to remain a vital part of its ecosystem.

Above is a photo of The Gift of Water, a biosculpture by Jackie Brookner.  Jackie Brookner’s biosculptures are living works of art with porous surfaces inhabited by carefully selected organisms that filter toxins out of aquatic ecosystems.  The art is an active member of the environment.

Jackie Brookner’s Biosculptures:  http://www.jackiebrookner.net/biosculpture.htm

Gunter Pauli’s website is: http://www.zeri.org/

Fritjof Capra’s website is: http://www.fritjofcapra.net/

This article originally appeared on the RegenerativeHomes™ website, July 7, 2010.

Stephen Bolling

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