Residential Design for Future: Comparative Study on Benefits, Needs, and Characteristics of “Multi-Purpose Residential Architecture” Design Concept †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Review
2.1.1. Life Characteristics of the Elderly and Environmental Factors
2.1.2. Multiple-Purpose Residential Architecture for Elderly
- Diverse: The residential space is not only designed for seniors but also for people of any age with diverse physical and mental abilities. The functionalities of the space can be commonly shared—meeting the diverse living needs of seniors and residents.
- Independent: Safety is a must-have when it comes to the space and facility design. It also provides flexible design and functionality to support seniors to live independently.
- Variety: We provide quality healthcare and senior care services with a variety of choices for food services and social and educational opportunities to better fulfill and support seniors’ healthy living.
- Meaningful: MPRA supports seniors’ daily activities and needs, a healthy and independent environment, and respect to enjoy their everyday lives with fulfillment and meaning.
- Network: MPRA is a service hub with the potential to build a network of hubs internationally so seniors can travel and reside in hubs and share the same principles and services. It is a franchise to be prompted globally [4].
2.1.3. Environmental Assessment Indicators of MRPA
- Safety: Characteristics of the maximum environmental safety protection.
- Accessibility: Satisfy the needs of seniors to arrive, enter, unite, and access spaces.
- Comfortableness: Ensuring people reach their destination smoothly while enjoying outdoor living space and public amenities.
- Social support: Social activities and mental health support are available within the environment.
- Independence/Privacy: Seniors can easily join a variety of activities available in various spaces and scales with their privacy protected.
2.2. Data Analysis
2.2.1. Reliability Analysis
2.2.2. Basic Data Analysis
2.2.3. Analysis of Multiple-Choice Questions
2.2.4. Environmental Indicators
- Safety: The visibility of traffic signs, pedestrian walk time signals, and the accessibility of simple and proper traffic guidance scored low with 74.3% of the respondents agreeing.
- Social Support: Community healthcare and senior care sanitation scored low as 63.6% expressed dissatisfaction.
- Privacy: The functionality of existing public amenities was scored low as 36% of the respondents indicated dissatisfaction.
- Accessibility: The distance between home and service locations in the existing community and the density of public amenities scored low as 40% expressed dissatisfaction.
- Comfortableness: The availability of different sizes of activity spaces in communities was scored low as 47.9% indicated dissatisfaction.
2.2.5. Significance
3. Results
3.1. Needs for Living Space and Mpra Design Concept
3.2. Ages and Cognitive Attitudes and Spatial Needs for MPRA
4. Discussion and Conclusions
- Safety: Indoor carpets to reduce the possibility of slipping, falling, injury, and noise.
- Accessibility: The destination reached by public transportation and connected to the local community service.
- Comfort: The design of assistive devices to increase the sense of dignity for the elderly, such as intelligent lift cabinets and handrails embedded into the interior wall design or combined with other art installations (Figure 1)
- Privacy/Independence: different room sizes and households and an intelligent identification system.
- Social support: Day-care and temporary-care facilities to increase activity space and care.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Indicators | Question | Ages |
---|---|---|
Safety | The community environment makes people feel safe and secure | F = 4.910 p = 0.009 ** |
Independence/Privacy | Space with privacy and social functions | F = 7.298 p = 0.001 *** |
Social support | Activities in the area where you currently live meet your needs | F = 4.391 p = 0.014 * |
Social support | Nursing care and adult sunshine services in the current community | F = 3.855 p = 0.024 * |
Question | Ages |
---|---|
The living environment needs to change as we are getting old | F = 4.910 p = 0.009 ** |
Time from home to most frequently used facilities? | F = 19.822 p = 0.003 ** |
Do you think transforming horizontal service to vertical service is more suitable for the elderly? | F = 12.605 p = 0.050 * |
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Chen, T.-Y.; Tsai, S.-Y. Residential Design for Future: Comparative Study on Benefits, Needs, and Characteristics of “Multi-Purpose Residential Architecture” Design Concept. Eng. Proc. 2024, 74, 62. https://doi.org/10.3390/engproc2024074062
Chen T-Y, Tsai S-Y. Residential Design for Future: Comparative Study on Benefits, Needs, and Characteristics of “Multi-Purpose Residential Architecture” Design Concept. Engineering Proceedings. 2024; 74(1):62. https://doi.org/10.3390/engproc2024074062
Chicago/Turabian StyleChen, Ting-Yueh, and Shu-Ying Tsai. 2024. "Residential Design for Future: Comparative Study on Benefits, Needs, and Characteristics of “Multi-Purpose Residential Architecture” Design Concept" Engineering Proceedings 74, no. 1: 62. https://doi.org/10.3390/engproc2024074062
APA StyleChen, T.-Y., & Tsai, S.-Y. (2024). Residential Design for Future: Comparative Study on Benefits, Needs, and Characteristics of “Multi-Purpose Residential Architecture” Design Concept. Engineering Proceedings, 74(1), 62. https://doi.org/10.3390/engproc2024074062