Showing posts with label POLICY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label POLICY. Show all posts

Saturday, August 23, 2025

PURE SAFE URBAN MOBILITY GENIUS

ILLUMINATED CROSSWALK STRIPS IN DOWNTOWN MEDELLIN


Crosswalk edges light up neon green to tell pedestrians it is time to cross safely.

Most of these are in La Candelaria Medellin Colombia — the congested and chaotic centro.

Alternately, the edge of crosswalks in the urban core light up neon bright red — to signal pedestrians that it is not safe to cross.

The red-green “walk” system helps combat the ambient noise confusion created by motorcycles, cars and booming music.



Saturday, June 7, 2025

BOUNDLESS (BY AUTHOR ALEX NORMAN)

REAL STORIES AND PRACTICAL STRATEGIES FOR INCLUSIVE LIVING


As a Universal Design writer, educator, planner and advocate -- I applaud Alex Norman for authoring BOUNDLESS: Real Stories and Practical Strategies for Inclusive Living. 

In these troubling time of pushback against equity/inclusion for People with Disabilities, we need books that focus on Universal Design.

From the book blurb:

In Boundless: Real Stories and Practical Strategies for Inclusive Living, Alex Norman and Garrett Mayersohn share personal stories, lived experiences, and practical strategies to help readers identify and remove hidden barriers that exclude millions of people every day, often without us realizing it.

Through these real-world insights and the seven proven principles of Universal Design, this book offers practical ways to create environments where everyone feels welcome and empowered, no matter their age, ability, or background.

Amazon: https://a.co/d/8v2se4J



Sunday, April 13, 2025

UNIVERSAL DESIGN MYTH BUSTING

HOSTED BY STARKLOFF DISABILITY INSTITUTE'S

NEWLY EXPANDED UNIVESAL DESIGN PROGRAM


Honored to cover two of five myths discussed during the April 10 Universal Design Myths Busted virtual panel presentation hosted by Starkloff Disability Institute's newly expanded UD program.

I was gratified to be part of an expert panel also featuring Tiffany Dill, Meaghan Walls and Gretchen Kingma.Speaking to a large online audience, we broke down common misconceptions about Universal Design and its impact on everyone.

Thanks to the incomparable Rachel Goldmeier and the entire Starkloff team for facilitating a dynamite, 75-slide program.

https://starkloff.org/services/universal-design/

Saturday, April 5, 2025

MIAMI REFUSES TO PROTECT PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES

CARS DANGEROUSLY BLOCKING SIDEWALKS ARE NEVER TOWED

Welcome to Miami — where we despise pedestrians.

Dozens of times I have asked cops to tow cars blocking sidewalks — because it forces people with disabilities into dangerous streets.

The answer always is NO.

But Miami Police does tow vehicles (because we all know 5000 pound trucks and SUVs are more important than human lives.)

The city tows vehicles that: slightly block the roadway, park in areas temporarily roped off for festivals, break down in traffic, etc.

Basically, if it slows traffic by 1% -- it's towed.

If it endangers people with disabilities & all pedestrians by 100% -- it's ignored.

PLEASE STOP THE ABLEISM NOW!



Friday, April 4, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


Carol Kachadoorian is a transportation planner and executive director of dblTilde CORE, a nonprofit that promotes active mobility infrastructure, especially for older adults.

While she praises Universal Design and wide, gently sloped curb ramps; smooth, unobstructed sidewalks; safe crosswalks; and transit that serves more than commuters, she also promotes active mobility.

It is a misnomer that as people age, they stop being active. 

If a person can no longer drive, they might take more trips by cycling.

“If we don’t design the right way, the person will be less inclined to be physically active,” said Kachadoorian, who leads a survey of people 50 and older that cycle.

“The fundamental thing is to create infrastructure that keeps older adults physically active. The result is better mobility, independence and dignity.”

Thursday, April 3, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


Jeremy Southerland, Gensler’s southeast region senior living practice area leader, said “When we talk about active adult communities/environments, the following is the current definition we’re using to measure our success: 

“Active adult communities offer independence, equity, and dynamic living environments.

They sustain and activate life experiences and are calibrated for adaptation to the evolving needs of the aging mind and body.

Active adult communities nurture life-span and well-span.”

Gensler also is designing what it believes is the next generation of 55+ active adult residences.

Willow Valley Communities’ Mosaic in Lancaster, Pa., is a 20-floor tower with 147 two- and three-bedroom units.

Ground floor retail plus memberships open to the public for Mosaic’s wellness center, spa and tower bar are designed to facilitate stronger connections with the community as a whole.

“By investing in the revitalization of downtown Lancaster, this project celebrates the important role that older adults play in the success of multigenerational urban communities,” Southerland said.

“Three lobbies take advantage of existing street slopes to ensure secure and easy access for residents enjoying the city, meeting friends for lunch and a show, going for bike rides, or returning from dinner in town.”

 

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


Gensler, the largest design and architecture firm in the world, has senior living practice leaders.

The San Francisco-based firm has generated reports on intergenerational communities and is designing a groundbreaking project that will blend senior living with a major college campus.

The Varcity at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., will bring alums back to school for their senior years.

The complex of apartments, town houses, villas and flats will create 230 rental units on 14 acres.

About 60 percent of the units will provide independent-living options as well as assisted-living and memory-care units.

Tama Duffy Day, Gensler’s global senior living leader, said University officials hope Varcity at Purdue will allow residents and current students to interact and learn from each other.

The first floor of the main building will feature shared amenities for students and residents that will include an event design lab, lecture hall, makerspace, lifelong learning space, an early childhood learning center and a work-share space.

Varcity residents will have access to classes and lectures on campus and a school ID card that provides access to all campus facilities. Amenities will include dining areas, a bar, gym, aerobics space, a pool and spa, pickleball courts and an outdoor kitchen and grilling station.

“I think that to talk about planning tools, you must take a broader view… you can’t assume that if you install park benches and time your traffic lights to allow additional time for pedestrians, that you can call a community age friendly,” said Jeremy Southerland, Gensler’s southeast region senior living practice area leader.

 

 

 


Tuesday, April 1, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


To further foster intergenerational living and connectivity, Prairie Hill’s eco-friendly site is not isolated.

It is intentionally located on bus lines and biking and walking trails about a mile from the University of Iowa and downtown Iowa City—so most daily needs can be met without needing a car.

The development is adjacent to a relatively new, large, multifaceted city park.

Monday, March 31, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


Barbara Bailey, co-founder and resident of Prairie Hill, explained the appeal of the co-housing developent.

“We have meals once a week cooked by volunteer cooks. Residents pay five dollars to cover the cost and it puts on a meal for the whole community. We call it Tasty Tuesday,” said Bailey.

“Vegetables are brought down from the garden and prepared for the meals.

“People come together in the common house. We have morning coffee, movie nights, game nights, even beer brewing.”

The development is structured as a condominium.

Bailey dubbed the governing structure as a “sociocracy—no one head person, but committees in charge of things.”

Bailey believes Universal Design is a must for intergenerational living and co-housing.

“Most units have roll-in showers, accessible baths, light switches accessible to people in wheelchairs,” she said.

“We hired an architect very versed in the ADA and inclusion.

You get through the grounds without using steps and the two-story community building has an elevator.”

 

 

Sunday, March 30, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


In Iowa City, Iowa, the innovative Prairie Hill Co-Housing is a leader in co-housing, land stewardship, master planning, sustainability and intergenerational living.

The development is on 7.3 acres and has 37 residences with 55 residents.

Thirty of its units have earned LEED for Homes Gold Certification and it was a 2024 United States Green Building Council LEED Home Award winner in the Outstanding Multifamily category, earning praise as a leading example of sustainability and environmental stewardship.

“Some co-housing is restricted to people over 55, but we didn’t do that—we wanted the vibrancy of youth,” said Barbara Bailey, co-founder and resident of Prairie Hill.

“Life is centered on a 5,000-square-foot common house with a big kitchen, laundry and guest rooms.”

People buy units at Prairie Hill, which has studios, and one-, two- and three-bedroom units.

More than half the acreage is dedicated to orchards, gardens and land conservation.

The development is planted in prairie grass, so it does not need to be watered or mowed.

The all-electric homes are designed for energy efficiency. Solar panels generate more power than the development consumes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, March 28, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


Jim Elliott, senior transportation planner at Toole Design, said community engagement is key to designing places based on facts and needs, not stereotypes. 

He mentioned Toole Design’s work on the “LA Safe Routes for Seniors” project, which aims to eliminate fatal and serious injury crashes involving older adult Angelinos.

The project team’s approach to engage seniors in the planning process has evolved over time to emphasize in-person engagement opportunities, such as senior center site visits and one-on-one interviews, instead of electronic methods, such as online surveys, which some may have difficulty using.

“We need to control speeds and make it more comfortable to traverse streets,” said Jeremy Chrzan, multimodal design practice lead at Toole Design.

“We need things like pedestrian refuges that break up the number of lanes people must cross.

We need raised crosswalks — they are outstanding for people using wheelchairs for mobility and they slow down drivers. Even material choice factors in.

Fancy pavers that look like stones might look nice, but they often settle and become tripping hazards.”

Thursday, March 27, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


There is a misconception that older adults want to move away from the hustle and bustle of the city, or even the streetcar suburb, to live in isolated senior communities.

Jeremy Chrzan, multimodal design practice lead at Toole Design, said the fact is lots of older adults are moving into more urbanized areas.

Some are downsizing, leaving the big yard and big house for a smaller urban unit because they want nearby access to health care, recreation, the arts, shopping and more.

He said a well-connected transit system is key to intergenerational communities, because it connects people who are too young to drive, too old to drive or just plain don’t want to drive

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


Jeremy Chrzan, multimodal design practice lead at Toole Design, said density is the key.

Many people equate density with Manhattan, but that is height, not density. Density can take the form of low- or mid-rise buildings with a mix of uses.

“The idea of greater density and where people can walk and bike is consistent with what people say they want,” Chrzan said, noting an Urban Land Institute study that revealed more than half of the people in the nation want to live in a place where they don’t have to use a car.

“There are a lot of linkages between land-use planning and development.

There is a chasm between what people develop and what people want to rent or buy.”

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES

Jim Elliott, senior transportation planner at Toole Design, said planning for seniors and intergenerational communities sometimes focuses on bike-pedestrian paths but forgets to address a healthy mix of land use. “Getting land use right is really critical for creating walkable communities.

You have to have the destinations that are nearby for people to go to—parks, stores, healthcare, places to exercise, people to visit,” he said.

Elliott said creating new or retrofitting existing areas to support intergenerational communities must provide a variety of transportation options.

He said his mother lives in an Arizona community intentionally designed for older adults.

“They made the mistake of assuming that everyone could drive,” he said of the Arizona 55+ community developed decades ago.

“It has great sidewalks, but they do not connect to stores or places people need to go. It causes a lot of stress for [his mom].

She is at the point of feeling uncomfortable in a car.

But she’s also feeling like she can’t give up her car because she can’t [do chores and errands] without it.”

 

 

 

 

Monday, March 24, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


In the APA research paper that he co-authored, Irv Katz, senior fellow emeritus at Generations United and former president & CEO of the National Human Services Assembly, cites major studies that both underscore the problems of today’s siloed living and makes the case for an emphasis on town planning centered on intergenerational interactions.

“The way we have planned our communities has had disproportionate impacts on the health and well-being of children and older adults.

They suffer from a lack of safe spaces for independent mobility; a lack of public spaces that address their needs; and a lack of opportunities for social participation,” the report states.

“Anxiety and depression are on the rise in today’s adolescents (NIHCM Foundation 2021). Older adults are living longer, but many suffer from loneliness and social isolation (National Academies 2020).

We have an urgent need for a social recovery of our cities, and children and older adults must be centered in our response.”

Sunday, March 23, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


Irv Katz, senior fellow emeritus at Generations United and former president & CEO of the National Human Services Assembly, urged planners to be intentional about creating environments in which young and old connect organically to the benefit of both and benefit to society.

He said it would be great if mayors, planning commissions, county councils, etc., stopped the battle of single-family vs. multifamily zoning and instead focused on a range of housing types that are both affordable and conducive to intergenerational living.

Friday, March 21, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


Irv Katz, senior fellow emeritus at Generations United and former president & CEO of the National Human Services Assembly, said Universal Design should be emphasized in housing units and communities.

A barrier-free approach is a must for the one in four people that have some level of disability; it allows comfortable living for people who are aging; and it creates wide sidewalks and safer streets to cross for young people.

“It creates access to health and social services; schools, libraries and other public facilities; as well as commercial development where people work and meet their daily needs,” he said.

“It would be cool if planners thought of those elements not as different things, but as essential parts that must be woven together to create livable small communities within the big communities.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, March 20, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES



Irv Katz, senior fellow emeritus at Generations United and former president & CEO of the National Human Services Assembly, shared that nearly three million children are being raised by grandparents in this country.

But very little housing is being built to support that. Land-use regulations sometimes prevent it.

Katz said cities could learn from Plaza West, a 12-story, 223-unit apartment building in the Mount Vernon Triangle neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Fifty units are targeted to “grandfamilies”—grandparents who are raising grandchildren where the parent is not present. The affordable development is next to a park, where more intergenerational interaction can take place.

“It is designed not just with single-bedroom apartments for seniors—which is typically what we do.

It has multiple bedroom units for grandparents raising two, three or four children,” said Katz, emphasizing that masterplans and zoning code must be more flexible to allow diverse housing.

“We can learn a lot from and should emulate immigrant communities.

They tend to have multiple generations under one roof.

Everyone benefits.”

 

 

 

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES

Irv Katz, senior fellow emeritus at Generations United and former president & CEO of the National Human Services Assembly, said planners are aware of the need for intergenerational communities, but the notion hasn’t “reached the levers of power”—

the mayors, congress members and others who can support intergenerational living with everything from zoning that allows it, infrastructure that encourages it, and funding that supports it.

“We do housing in developments as little islands. 

They may have sidewalks, but they may not connect to daily needs or even the adjacent neighborhood.

We need to think of clusters of neighborhoods that together create a village,” he said. “Walkability, bikeability and access for people with disabilities is a must.”

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

CREATING INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNITIES

MIXING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES IN THEIR LIVING ENVIRONMENT LEADS TO HEALTHIER, MORE FULFILLED, BETTER CONNECTED AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLES


Irv Katz, senior fellow emeritus at Generations United and former president & CEO of the National Human Services Assembly, co-authored a research paper on aging trends and placemaking for the APA.

He collaborated with Matthew Kaplan, Ph.D., professor of Intergenerational Programs and Aging in the Department of Agricultural Economics, Sociology and Education at Pennsylvania State University.

“We have this big boomer population that is retired or retiring.

Whether they are poor or wealthy, they get steered to live in [isolated elder communities],” Katz said.

“They only interact with children once or twice per year—when the grandchildren arrive or a scout troop comes in to sing Christmas carols.

We must plan for housing that doesn’t create such silos.”