Intergenerational Living and Design

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Intergenerational Living and Design: Architecture, Landscape, and Social Fabric John Shreve, PhD/AIA/AICP Principal, Populous Architects+Planners University of Kansas, New Cities 2.0

CE Information AIA - 23 Credit Hours available  

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EDAC - 9 Credit Hours available   

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Interior Designers - 23 Credit Hours available    

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Session Description Intergenerational Living and Design: Architecture, Landscape, and Social Fabric Based on interdisciplinary evidence gathered over the past four years, New Cities 2.0 presents designs and rationale for an intergenerational community-aging model as a socially desirable, more affordable, and healthier alternative to the existing age-segregated, institutional CCRC-aging model. John Shreve and Joe Colistra will examine the holistic themes and meanings of “intergenerationality” in psychological, sociological, and financial terms, expressed conceptually in urban design, landscape architecture, architecture, technology, and intentional programming.

Session Learning Objectives  Explore research on values of intergenerational relationships for health and well-being

 Examine and analyze intergenerational urban design and landscape design models

 Explore various Aging-in-Place residential types and architecture

 Critique designs for integrated, intentional, and decentralized physical and social environments

Key Learnings, Process Improvements and Take-Aways Session ID: E18 1) Academic and professional collaboration is fertile ground for innovative thinking on aging in America; 2) But that’s not enough: this inquiry has to cross multiple disciplinary boundaries, constantly asking new questions; 3) Emerging technologies hold great potential for radically changing lifestyles and environments, in positive ways; 4) Ideally, technology and caregiving expertise are integrated into the design process early and often; 5) An integrated configuration of buildings, infrastructure, and landscape leads to a diverse community profile; 6) Keys to fostering intergenerational design: eat, think, move, connect – with a community design that supports those goals;

THANK YOU