Samenvatting
By 2050 more than a quarter of the Flemish population will be older than 65 years; for other
European countries similar figures are predicted. The current traditional care system in
Belgium and Western Europe is characterised by a segregation of elderly people from the active society and by a high nursing cost. Based on this, a drastic shift is needed towards a systemic integration of informal care (by family, friends and volunteers) for a majority of older people that only require little or infrequent care. Such a shift will however require other architectural concepts, allowing dwellings and care facilities to support changing (caring) needs and improve the well-being of the elderly and the carer.
Time-incorporated building will play an important role in providing flexible, adaptable and
customised dwelling and care solutions towards realising aging-in-place. In this, the design allows for different forms of (re-)gaining autonomy and developing identity, two prerequisites for a sense of well-being in a living and care environment.
The development of a Flemish pilot project provides a playground to investigate the beneficial effect of innovative architectural concepts on the total life cycle environmental impact of the building and the organisation of care, as well as the well-being of the future residents. Through research by design and a life cycle impact assessment the following related research questions are tackled in this project:
- In which way will time-incorporated building design help to balance the initial impact and life cycle impact of the building?
- What is the effect of time-incorporated building design on the environmental impact?
- In what way do building elements need to be detailed to support low external environmental costs, low financial costs and changing care needs in a (care)home environment (leading to low organisational costs)?
European countries similar figures are predicted. The current traditional care system in
Belgium and Western Europe is characterised by a segregation of elderly people from the active society and by a high nursing cost. Based on this, a drastic shift is needed towards a systemic integration of informal care (by family, friends and volunteers) for a majority of older people that only require little or infrequent care. Such a shift will however require other architectural concepts, allowing dwellings and care facilities to support changing (caring) needs and improve the well-being of the elderly and the carer.
Time-incorporated building will play an important role in providing flexible, adaptable and
customised dwelling and care solutions towards realising aging-in-place. In this, the design allows for different forms of (re-)gaining autonomy and developing identity, two prerequisites for a sense of well-being in a living and care environment.
The development of a Flemish pilot project provides a playground to investigate the beneficial effect of innovative architectural concepts on the total life cycle environmental impact of the building and the organisation of care, as well as the well-being of the future residents. Through research by design and a life cycle impact assessment the following related research questions are tackled in this project:
- In which way will time-incorporated building design help to balance the initial impact and life cycle impact of the building?
- What is the effect of time-incorporated building design on the environmental impact?
- In what way do building elements need to be detailed to support low external environmental costs, low financial costs and changing care needs in a (care)home environment (leading to low organisational costs)?
Originele taal-2 | English |
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Titel | 25th |
Redacteuren | A. Osman, G. Bruyns, C. Aigbavboa |
Plaats van productie | Durban |
Uitgeverij | International Union of Architects |
ISBN van geprinte versie | 978-0-86970-783-8 |
Status | Published - 2014 |
Evenement | Unknown - Duur: 1 jan 2014 → … |
Publicatie series
Naam | Architecture Otherwhere |
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Conference
Conference | Unknown |
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Periode | 1/01/14 → … |