Independant and secure to live your life in your own home, "aging-in-place." You maintain your dignity and enjoy the lifestyle you have earned. We can design and build a beautiful "barrier free" home with thoughtful planning for the future..."Future Proofing."
These designs are beautiful and practical today and allow for changes to be made if and when your needs change in the future. Advance planning when building allows the cost of future changes to be a fraction of the cost of traditional remodeling, without broadcasting vulnerability to passes by.
The old approach to adapting a home to be "barrier free" is very expensive and disruptive. It typically is done after a health related episode, an already stressful time.
The home you raised your family in may not meet your changing needs as you age. As "empty nesters" we may want special design features, the "things we have waited for."
You may never need to make any changes to your home due to aging. If you do need to, thoughtful planning when your new home is built can mean the difference between staying in your home or not, both physically and financially.
We can build in a wide selection of "future proof" options that you do not find in regular homes. In regular homes, these types of features are expensive to retrofit or remodel to include and they can be a signal to criminals of vulnerability as well.
If you want to enjoy "aging-in-place" we can help. Our "Longivity Living Homes" are designed for you to enjoy now and in the future. No/low maintinence exteriors and energy efficient, an "Energy Advantage Home."
Call us today to begin your "future proofing."
From Home & Garden Magazine ( April 2008 ) - "Think ahead for your future needs when building a home" When you think about it, it should come as no surprise that the big growth area in housing these days is housing for the elderly. Let’s face it: The Boomers are getting on in years. But the traditional concepts of elderly housing – subsidized apartment complexes, assisted living and/or nursing homes – are evolving, and for some, those concepts are becoming obsolete. More and more people are looking at ways of staying in their own homes, and some builders are coming up with some innovative ways of helping them do just that. It’s really just a matter of thinking ahead, but that is often something we don’t do in terms of our housing.
Any aged couple building a new home needs to consider whether they want to stay in that home for the long haul, to that point where they might require live-in assistance. If that’s what they want, building some simple amenities into the home up front can save a lot of money down the road. “You build them accessible now,” says French of Meigs’ Longevity Living Homes. “The thing is to get people to think about this issue before it’s a crisis. This ‘Aging in Place’ concept is really gathering steam. The upfront cost is minimal…to try and retrofit an existing home is huge. It goes from nominal to phenomenal.” Meigs, which designs and builds panelized homes, modular homes and traditional "stick built" has a hundreds of possibilities that new home purchasers can consider. Some typical items include: In addition, said French, the builders suggest to those thinking way ahead that they rough in a third basement bathroom in the event they eventually have a live-in attendant. That may seem extravagant, but when you consider the cost of long-term care in a nursing home, it just becomes good planning.“The idea is to be ready, and then incur lower costs as you need them. We really work at it to make our designs efficient,” said French. Meigs just built a home for a couple in Waunakee, for instance, that employed this concept, although in reverse. The couple building the home built what amounts to a very spacious apartment in half of the home’s exposed basement. The wife’s mother lives in the apartment, which has it's own entrance from the garage. She is maintaining her independence yet able to quickly summon help if it is needed, as would be the situation with live-in assisted care. French added that while there is a trend in construction to go to wider spaces between studs (24” instead of 16”) and use cross bracing with no sheeting, all to minimize costs, Meigs as bucked that trend.“We won’t go along with these minimum construction techniques,” said French. He also emphasized the firm’s commitment to saving energy, noting, “We sometimes are literally more than 40 to 60 percent efficient than what’s required to be Energy Star Certified.”
“Right now the 55 and older group makes up 21 percent of the new home buyers…older buyers purchase about 25 percent of all new homes,” added French. “It’s a growing market. The potential for us is tremendous.” Remember the Boomers? There’s an awful lot of them…. |