Friday, January 27, 2006

Boomers!!

There's been a lot of promo recently regarding the children of the 'baby boomers' getting to retirement age. However most of it has been related to getting life insurance or health insurance policies. You know, the typical T.V. ad. Anyway, I just thought this was a pretty cool article since it deals not with the "imminent death and taking care of you final expenses" line but instead what it means in the architectural world.

Older and WiserCreating Communities for Life
Randolph Jones, AIA, AICP

Young families in the 1950s and '60s dramatically altered the shape of America’s traditional neighborhoods. Sprawling suburban landscapes, the legacy of our parent’s generation, persist today. But, it will be their kids, America’s burgeoning aging population that will usher in a new direction in our patterns of settlement, redefining the very meaning and character of community.

Americans are growing older, in the largest numbers ever. By the decade ending 2012, the Bureau of Labor Statistics anticipates six million persons, ages 16 to 54, will have been added to the working age population. Over the same period, the 55 and over age bracket will swell by 18 million baby boomers, raising the question, Where are we all going to work, live, recreate, and … retire?

Unlike our parents, however, we are not planning to retire, not just yet. As we boomers turn 65, we will remain active, continuing to work at our chosen careers, or turning to other passions—creative pursuits, mentoring, traveling.

Not surprisingly, we’re also healthier than our parents, expecting to live longer, more active lifestyles. Not ready for nursing facilities, or even assisted living complexes, we’re looking to stay connected to our neighborhoods, our cities, and our hometowns. Many of us are empty nesters, rattling around our now-too-big houses, looking for alternatives but determined to stay close to our communities.

As a result, many baby boomers are opting to settle in America’s urban areas and grow old there. The question is whether our future housing choices will be limited to traditional senior living projects that continue to consume our nation’s greenfields at the edge of the metropolis, or will we recast Mr. Blanding’s dream house to better suit our vision of vibrant, compact communities featuring walkable, mixed-use, mixed-income, intergenerational housing in traditional neighborhoods?

Thanks to the smart growth movement sweeping the country, we’re rediscovering our urban neighborhoods and rekindling a strong sense of community. The core principles, building in areas served by current infrastructure and within existing community fabric, make perfect sense for all ages. Growing more compactly supports development of a range of affordable housing options in existing neighborhoods that can accommodate our burgeoning number of seniors, embracing the notion of aging in place. What’s good for our communities will be grand for our aging population.

Why is the concept of community so important to our aging population? We know the aging process is fraught with losses. For an elderly population of unprecedented levels, maintaining family connections, established social networks, and developing new friendships will be critical to managing setbacks due to disconnects that occur as greater numbers of seniors begin living alone, or in group settings.

Creating new housing opportunities and increasing choice for older singles and couples within our existing communities will provide the foundation for a future that allows seniors to stay connected, healthy, stimulated, and active in a larger community. Aging boomers will be seeking and creating those places that feel familiar, safe, and secure, and allow them to remain connected to family and friends, all within a short walk to the drug store and the library.

How will current trends in housing construction designed for aging address the overwhelming need for senior housing within our dramatic new vision of community? According to Moore Diversified Services and the American Seniors Housing Association, which tracked average annual total units between 1997 and 1999, found that the 54,000 units produced during each of these two years dropped to just under 30,000 units per year between 2000 and 2005, resulting in 120,000 fewer senior units over that time period. Clearly, the market is not keeping pace.

Developers are focusing on a very narrow segment of the elderly market, the so-called traditional “senior living products.” If current development trends in housing production for our aging populations continue, new housing will fall far short of likely demand. Projects will be limited to those that carry the lowest risk, are quickest to market, and have the highest rate of return. Risking our future living environments in a commodities market dealing in isolated enclaves for income-eligible seniors is not an option. Major changes in our housing supply, by location, numbers, and types for seniors, will be required.

If we are truly going to create communities of quality, we must deliver more affordable housing, convenient shopping, better access to public transportation, health care, and creational and cultural facilities—all hallmarks of our traditional cities and towns. Our emerging communities, shaped by a growing older and wiser crowd, will feature compactness and mixing of uses, convenience and walkability, and, perhaps most important, economic and social diversity across all ages. The following primer contains advice on what steps will be needed to create communities based on our common interest in a quality future.

As with any retirement plan, boomers creating new communities for the future will need to get their legal house in order, create special tax incentives for elders, invest in retirement accounts, plan for health care, and prepare the family house for sale.

• Get Your Legal House in Order.
The first thing that needs our attention are outdated regulatory frameworks—antiquated zoning and building codes. Short of wholesale revisions to state enabling legislation, zoning overlays within special districts such as downtowns or neighborhood centers are an effective means for creating mixed-use housing and commercial precincts in the traditional form of housing over the "mom & pop" convenience store. Similarly, we need to modify our building codes for older neighborhoods to allow for development of accessory units, or infill granny cottages at the back of existing lots on the alley where small ancillary apartments can be developed.

• Create Tax Incentives for Seniors.
Many communities have adopted various incentives for development that create affordable housing within mixed-use or multifamily housing projects. These techniques could also fund a community’s elderly housing trust, create affordable units for seniors through set-asides from density bonuses for new or rehabbed housing, or with a twist on new market tax credits, provide elderly housing within our existing neighborhoods.

• Invest in Retirement Accounts.
Infrastructure investments, particularly in public transit, are the smart growth equivalent of your IRA. More compact growth in existing urban areas, coupled with transit-friendly residential and commercial uses near transit stations, will help create new transit-oriented villages that build community. Achieving our new vision for the future will require significant new investments to better serve our regions and emerging neighborhoods.

• Plan for Health Care.
Staying healthy through exercise and diet is the best health insurance our aging boomers can buy. The shape of our metropolitan regions and provision of accessible open space with walking, biking, and hiking paths, are critical to the well-being of our citizens. Imagine being able to leave our compact neighborhood and join the morning walkers on the river greenway loop trail.

• Get the House Ready for New Buyers.
By now we have our plan well under way. New zoning is in place. Our incentives are attracting lots of senior development proposals, and transit-oriented villages are springing up in our communities. We have acquired key open space parcels that will double as wetland protection areas and provide handicapped access into the nature preserve. It’s time to prepare our house for new buyers because the range of new infill housing available for boomers has blossomed—senior apartments; affordable units in mixed-income, mixed-use complexes; granny cottages; accessory units; and new market rate townhouses.

Our healthy, active boomers who comprise the lion’s share of the elderly housing market, will be scanning our new community’s local real estate ads, and finding, ample listings for “affordable, mixed-income, intergenerational housing, conveniently located near shopping, transit, and the library.” As predicted, the older and wiser generation will have succeeded in transforming sprawling suburbs into compact vibrant, 21st century neighborhoods, each with a newly awakened sense of community.

(Article may be found at www.aia.org)

1 Comments:

At 11:49 AM, Blogger Mike Glodo said...

I just started tracking new-market tax issues working with a Main Street org.

NY Times article "Luring Business Developers Into Low-Income Areas"

at http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/25/realestate/commercial/25credits.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all>

Bravo for mixed use.

 

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