Sustainable Housing in Aged Care Facilities

Australia's aging population is increasingly in need of age and needs appropriate housing, in addition to the adaptions to the family home to accommodate aging in place. New aged care/retirement focused housing developments are becoming more prevalent, yet sustainable in their design and planni...

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Main Authors: Ringvall, Kate, Brunner, Julie
Other Authors: Kristian Ruming, Bill Randolph and Nicole Gurran
Format: Conference Paper
Published: State of Australian Cities Research Network 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.soacconference.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Ringvall-Social.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/29799
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author Ringvall, Kate
Brunner, Julie
author2 Kristian Ruming, Bill Randolph and Nicole Gurran
author_facet Kristian Ruming, Bill Randolph and Nicole Gurran
Ringvall, Kate
Brunner, Julie
author_sort Ringvall, Kate
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Australia's aging population is increasingly in need of age and needs appropriate housing, in addition to the adaptions to the family home to accommodate aging in place. New aged care/retirement focused housing developments are becoming more prevalent, yet sustainable in their design and planning is yet to gain the significance it deserves. There is currently limited policy direction to encourage multi-housing/communal housing developments that focus on sustainability as a guiding principal, and even less example of them being created in Australia. The motivation to increase sustainability in the planning and development of aged care and retirement housing is embedded in the knowledge that energy and water prices will continue to rise along with the cost of living in most cities in the industrial world. Governments have a significant role in establishing the policy framework to guide the development of more sustainable housing for Australia's aging population. This paper seeks to establish an understanding of resource using in the aged care sector through an examination of a case study site, what capacity exists within the case study to reduce resource use and in particular engergy and water, and ultimately add to the research in this important atea. Using case study methodology and observational analysis, an aged care facility in Perth, WA has been investigated to understanding the underlying environmental, social and economic sustainability of the site compared to what the literature suggests are the minimum requirements in the planning and development of multi-housing with regard to sustainability, and development recommendations for future policy.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-297992017-02-28T01:50:23Z Sustainable Housing in Aged Care Facilities Ringvall, Kate Brunner, Julie Kristian Ruming, Bill Randolph and Nicole Gurran Ageing sustainability in aged care aged care Australia's aging population is increasingly in need of age and needs appropriate housing, in addition to the adaptions to the family home to accommodate aging in place. New aged care/retirement focused housing developments are becoming more prevalent, yet sustainable in their design and planning is yet to gain the significance it deserves. There is currently limited policy direction to encourage multi-housing/communal housing developments that focus on sustainability as a guiding principal, and even less example of them being created in Australia. The motivation to increase sustainability in the planning and development of aged care and retirement housing is embedded in the knowledge that energy and water prices will continue to rise along with the cost of living in most cities in the industrial world. Governments have a significant role in establishing the policy framework to guide the development of more sustainable housing for Australia's aging population. This paper seeks to establish an understanding of resource using in the aged care sector through an examination of a case study site, what capacity exists within the case study to reduce resource use and in particular engergy and water, and ultimately add to the research in this important atea. Using case study methodology and observational analysis, an aged care facility in Perth, WA has been investigated to understanding the underlying environmental, social and economic sustainability of the site compared to what the literature suggests are the minimum requirements in the planning and development of multi-housing with regard to sustainability, and development recommendations for future policy. 2013 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/29799 http://www.soacconference.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Ringvall-Social.pdf State of Australian Cities Research Network restricted
spellingShingle Ageing
sustainability in aged care
aged care
Ringvall, Kate
Brunner, Julie
Sustainable Housing in Aged Care Facilities
title Sustainable Housing in Aged Care Facilities
title_full Sustainable Housing in Aged Care Facilities
title_fullStr Sustainable Housing in Aged Care Facilities
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable Housing in Aged Care Facilities
title_short Sustainable Housing in Aged Care Facilities
title_sort sustainable housing in aged care facilities
topic Ageing
sustainability in aged care
aged care
url http://www.soacconference.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Ringvall-Social.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/29799