Thursday, May 14, 2026

AS DEMAND TO AGE IN PLACE SOARS, SENIOR CITIZENS ARE SEEKING MORE WALKABILITY AND DIVERSE HOUSING TYPES

A TREND THAT ALSO SERVES PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES OF ALL AGES


“People don’t take into account their future needs,” said Rodney Harrell, Vice President, Family, Home and Community at AARP.

“When home shopping in our 30s, 40s, 50s --   we end up in neighborhoods that are remote,” he said.

Places for worship, places to meet, places for all essential services can only be reached by car.

Children leave, a spouse passes on, income reduces, they are no longer able to drive and they are in isolation.

It didn’t seem to be important to be within walking distance of that grocery store or pharmacy when they bought, but now it is very important.”

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

AS DEMAND TO AGE IN PLACE SOARS, SENIOR CITIZENS ARE SEEKING MORE WALKABILITY AND DIVERSE HOUSING TYPES

A TREND THAT ALSO SERVES PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES OF ALL AGES


A 2018 AARP survey that found 76% of Americans age 50 and older prefer to remain in their current residence as long as possible, just 46% feel they will be able to stay in their same home.

The reason for the gap is one of two things – a home too isolated from daily needs, or inadequate to serve their needs.

About one-third surveyed expect their homes to need major modifications to accommodate aging needs.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

AS DEMAND TO AGE IN PLACE SOARS, SENIOR CITIZENS ARE SEEKING MORE WALKABILITY AND DIVERSE HOUSING TYPES

A TREND THAT ALSO SERVES PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES OF ALL AGES


Gil Penalosa, founder and chair of the Toronto-based planning non-profit 8 80 Cities,
said the “war on benches” an ill-advised 20+ year trend of removing benches in cities as presumed deterrent to homeless people is “insane”

“Elderly people will not walk if there are no benches. 

They might not even use it, but they want to know it is there if they need it,” he said.

“You put in benches, shade and soon you have sidewalk cafes, people selling flowers, coffee shops, places to meet.”

 

Monday, May 11, 2026

AS DEMAND TO AGE IN PLACE SOARS, SENIOR CITIZENS ARE SEEKING MORE WALKABILITY AND DIVERSE HOUSING TYPES

A TREND THAT ALSO SERVES PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES OF ALL AGES


“They design streets to let cars make faster turns, but they don’t built an island in the middle of a crosswalk to let people cross safely,” said
Gil Penalosa, founder and chair of the Toronto-based planning non-profit 8 80 Cities.

“The engineers say `the elected officials won’t let us build an island because the drivers will be angry.’

I say ‘the children of those drivers are getting killed in the streets.’”

Sunday, May 10, 2026

AS DEMAND TO AGE IN PLACE SOARS, SENIOR CITIZENS ARE SEEKING MORE WALKABILITY AND DIVERSE HOUSING TYPES

A TREND THAT ALSO SERVES PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES OF ALL AGES


“Cities put posts and obstructions in the middle of the sidewalk,” said
Gil Penalosa, founder and chair of the Toronto-based planning non-profit 8 80 Cities.

“I say `You wouldn’t think of putting a post in the middle of the car lane, why would you think it is good to do that in the middle of the sidewalk,”

noting the obvious message is speeding cars are more important than the safety of children, people with disabilities and seniors on the sidewalk.

 

 

Saturday, May 9, 2026

PRIVILEGED TO HAVE 2 MILLION READERS

MORE THAN 2 MILLION UNIQUE READERS

HAVE VISITED MY BLOG OVER ITS LIFETIME 

 

TENS OF THOUSANDS READ IT EACH DAY

 


I am grateful that so many people read my daily posts about Universal Design, Inclusive Mobility, Perils for Pedestrians and Quality of Life.

 

My work creates a better built environment by influencing architects, engineers, planners, landscape architects and sustainability/resiliency professionals.

 


I have made power arguments for inclusion and equity with elected officials and appointed decision makers at the local, state and federal level.

 

I also toss in a few cute cat pics and some global travel photos.

 

That’s why it’s a blog, not the New York Times.




Friday, May 8, 2026

AS DEMAND TO AGE IN PLACE SOARS, SENIOR CITIZENS ARE SEEKING MORE WALKABILITY AND DIVERSE HOUSING TYPES

A TREND THAT ALSO SERVES PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES OF ALL AGES


Gil Penalosa, founder and chair of the Toronto-based planning non-profit 8 80 Cities,
said building a great network of wide, well-maintained sidewalks is one of the best things a mayor or city manager can do for a community’s sustainability.

“I have walked on streets where the sidewalk kept sloping for driveways and I thought `this is terrible for wheelchair users, this could cause a person to fall down and get injured.’

I told this to the city official, who said it meets the standards.

I said ‘maybe the standards are dumb.”