Older adults looking for alternatives to traditional senior housing
options, such as retirement homes, can enjoy both the independence and
involvement that cohousing offers.
Cohousing consists of a
community of people who want to live adjacent to each other and
participate in activities together while also having their own place to
call home. Members share communal property while owning their houses or
condos. Cohousing, averaging 20 to 40 units per community, comes in many
forms. In multigenerational cohousing, families and residents of all
ages, including seniors, inhabit the same communal space. A more recent
development is cohousing just for older adults.
Generally,
cohousing has a common kitchen, dining area and sitting area that
provide a place for members to gather and eat or socialize. The whole
development is often built around a central area, such as a park,
playground or courtyard, that all can use.
Everyone Pitches In
Cohousing
is not for those who would rather sit back and have someone else manage
their living complex. Collaborative living can be a lot of work,
especially when making group decisions. Unless started by a developer,
cohousing residents often design their own complex, even choosing the
materials, and run the community by consensus. As is inevitable with any
group of people, conflict is common—everything from how to allocate
members’ dues to where to build the sauna.
Reading the blog of a
man who helped start Wolf Creek Lodge, a senior cohousing community in
Grass Valley, Calif., you get a sense of the hands-on nature of this
process (“Community Building at Wolf Creek Lodge,” Bob Miller, Feb. 17,
2013 Cohousing Association of the United States).
Wolf
Creek residents formed cleaning teams that look after common areas such
as the patio, stairways, guest rooms, kitchen, dining room and sitting
room. A landscaping team created two new vegetable plots and planted a
third. Two members built a community compost area. The plan is to share
five meals together a week in the community building, prepared by cook
teams consisting of two to four members.
Community meetings cover
various topics. Members met recently to formulate a policy for letting
outside groups use their common dining room, kitchen and living room. A
“very informal ‘coffee club’ meets every morning around 8 a.m. to solve
worldwide political issues and jeopardize their health with sticky buns
and leftover dessert. This is clearly an area with opportunities for
improvement,” Miller writes jokingly.
Members designed Wolf Creek
Lodge to be environmentally green. The lodge includes passive solar
heating and cooling, in-floor radiant heating powered by a common
boiler, solar hot water and immediate walking access to trails and
stores. In 2012, California Governor Jerry Brown endorsed the concept of
cohousing as a more sustainable living environment.
Cohousing Just for Older Adults
Many
seniors opt for cohousing because they don’t like living alone, whether
in their own homes or retirement centers. With cohousing, you can’t
help but be involved; it might be helping to decide if the community
should get Wi-Fi or taking your neighbor to the grocery store because
she can no longer drive. In a shared space and lacking a staff,
residents are more likely to check up on their neighbors and care for
each other. At Silver Sage Village, a cohousing unit in Boulder, Colo.,
residents range in age from 50 to 80, ensuring that the “younger” adults
can take care of the older ones.
Different from intergenerational
cohousing, many senior communities cater to the needs of older adults.
At Wolf Creek Lodge, for example, all homes are single level, have guest
rooms for visiting children and grandchildren, are located near two
sizable shopping areas, have a reserved suite for a potential caregiver,
provide a hot tub rather than a swimming pool and have a
low-maintenance environment. The Wolf Creek Lodge blog emphasizes that
the “senior communal dining experience will be mature and the living
room peaceful, a daylong community environment,” as most members are
retired and can expect to be around the common areas for much of the
day.
Seniors who want to downsize and save money will find that
most cohousing communities can satisfy on both fronts. Cohousing
residences are typically 60 percent smaller than an average new American
home, occupy 30 percent less land and use 50 to 70 percent less energy
for heating and cooling than a resident’s previous home (“In Retiree
Housing, Talking About Multigenerations,” March 12, 2013, New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/13/business/retirementspecial/retirees-choose-intergenerational-cohousing.html).
Members can also save money by sharing work or kitchen tools.
Generations Living Together
Not
all seniors want to be segregated with other older adults. One woman,
95, chose intergenerational cohousing because “it’s logical to have
people of various ages together” and was worried she’d hear too many
people “complaining about their complaints” in a senior housing setting.
The
arrangement has value for younger residents, too: Children who don’t
regularly engage with older folks, perhaps because grandparents live far
away, learn what elders have to offer and what the end of life looks
like, a valuable lesson in a culture that tends to shunt its older
people off to the sidelines.
An agency in Chicago that offers
three sites for seniors and younger generations to interact phrases it
this way: “Intergenerational living is an innovative concept based upon
the idea that the blending of families, students and seniors in social
living activities builds a community that enhances our understanding of
one another. Our intergenerational homes provide a congenial environment
for those who wish to connect and share with other generations on a
daily basis.”
Resident assistants (typically college students) at
the Chicago intergenerational housing live on-site and assist residents
with housekeeping and laundry, as well as sharing creative and social
activities with them. “Having opportunities for peer companionship helps
eliminate feelings of loneliness and isolation,” according to H.O.M.E.
(“Intergenerational Housing,” Housing Opportunities & Maintenance for the Elderly).
In
Portland, Ore., a public/private partnership uses intergenerational
cohousing to help older adults contribute to society while aiding
adoptive families. Bridge Meadows offers families who have adopted three
or more children a four-bedroom house at below market rate, which is
often difficult to find for large adoptive families. At the same time,
the organization provides 27 one- and two-bedroom apartment units for
people age 55 or older who meet low-income requirements.
Seniors
at Bridge Meadows act as surrogate grandparents and mentors to the
children and families who live there. They are required to volunteer at
least seven hours per week teaching arts and crafts, giving music
lessons, leading story hours or taking the kids to the park
(“Intergenerational Ingenuity: Mixing Age Groups in Affordable Housing,”
August 28, 2013, Urban Land Institute).
Sources
Cohousing Association of the United States
“In Retiree Housing, Talking About Multigenerations,” March 12, 2013, New York Times
“Intergenerational Housing” Housing Opportunities & Maintenance for the Elderly
“Silver Sage Village,” April 4, 2013 Action Pact
“In Retiree Housing, Talking About Multigenerations,” March 12, 2013, New York Times
“Intergenerational Housing” Housing Opportunities & Maintenance for the Elderly
“Silver Sage Village,” April 4, 2013 Action Pact
View this article in the March 2014 Senior Spirit newsletter.
Blog posting provided by Society of Certified Senior Advisors
www.csa.us
Blog posting provided by Society of Certified Senior Advisors
www.csa.us