A Home for Life? A Critical Perspective on Housing Choice for “Downsizers” in the UK

A range of policy, research and media commentary has highlighted the link between housing, health, and wellbeing in later life, with discourses around “ageing in place” and “downsizing” emerging as particularly dominant. Proponents of “downsizing” strategies argue that the motivation for older peopl...

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Main Authors: Park Adam, Ziegler Friederike
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UCL Press 2016-03-01
Series:Architecture_MPS
Online Access:https://ucl.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.14324/111.444.amps.2016v9i2.001
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spelling doaj-627defc6b61a4c49bc060949f6a8f7762020-12-15T17:29:03ZengUCL PressArchitecture_MPS2050-90062016-03-0110.14324/111.444.amps.2016v9i2.001A Home for Life? A Critical Perspective on Housing Choice for “Downsizers” in the UKPark AdamZiegler FriederikeA range of policy, research and media commentary has highlighted the link between housing, health, and wellbeing in later life, with discourses around “ageing in place” and “downsizing” emerging as particularly dominant. Proponents of “downsizing” strategies argue that the motivation for older people should be self-evident: difficulties with maintenance, heating bills, getting upstairs, and the increasing risk of falls are all commonly referred to. This outlook also highlights the economic benefits of downsizing to “age-appropriate” housing, particularly in relation to potential savings for health and social care budgets. Drawing upon participatory research with older people in the city of Sheffield, UK, this paper critiques current practices and discourses around the commissioning, design, and management of purpose-built retirement housing. The paper calls for an urgent need to reframe housing from a lifecourse perspective and to recognize older people as active citizens, for whom their homes are essential to their continuing to contribute to family life and society. We argue for a more nuanced debate around “downsizing” and “ageing in place”, and call for policy-makers to recognize the risk of spatially and socially marginalizing older people through current limitations in housing choices. The paper concludes by setting out a number of measures to improve the choice, quality, and flexibility of housing for later life.https://ucl.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.14324/111.444.amps.2016v9i2.001
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Park Adam
Ziegler Friederike
spellingShingle Park Adam
Ziegler Friederike
A Home for Life? A Critical Perspective on Housing Choice for “Downsizers” in the UK
Architecture_MPS
author_facet Park Adam
Ziegler Friederike
author_sort Park Adam
title A Home for Life? A Critical Perspective on Housing Choice for “Downsizers” in the UK
title_short A Home for Life? A Critical Perspective on Housing Choice for “Downsizers” in the UK
title_full A Home for Life? A Critical Perspective on Housing Choice for “Downsizers” in the UK
title_fullStr A Home for Life? A Critical Perspective on Housing Choice for “Downsizers” in the UK
title_full_unstemmed A Home for Life? A Critical Perspective on Housing Choice for “Downsizers” in the UK
title_sort home for life? a critical perspective on housing choice for “downsizers” in the uk
publisher UCL Press
series Architecture_MPS
issn 2050-9006
publishDate 2016-03-01
description A range of policy, research and media commentary has highlighted the link between housing, health, and wellbeing in later life, with discourses around “ageing in place” and “downsizing” emerging as particularly dominant. Proponents of “downsizing” strategies argue that the motivation for older people should be self-evident: difficulties with maintenance, heating bills, getting upstairs, and the increasing risk of falls are all commonly referred to. This outlook also highlights the economic benefits of downsizing to “age-appropriate” housing, particularly in relation to potential savings for health and social care budgets. Drawing upon participatory research with older people in the city of Sheffield, UK, this paper critiques current practices and discourses around the commissioning, design, and management of purpose-built retirement housing. The paper calls for an urgent need to reframe housing from a lifecourse perspective and to recognize older people as active citizens, for whom their homes are essential to their continuing to contribute to family life and society. We argue for a more nuanced debate around “downsizing” and “ageing in place”, and call for policy-makers to recognize the risk of spatially and socially marginalizing older people through current limitations in housing choices. The paper concludes by setting out a number of measures to improve the choice, quality, and flexibility of housing for later life.
url https://ucl.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.14324/111.444.amps.2016v9i2.001
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