Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T11:10:57.404Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Assisted Housing for Ontario's Rural Elderly: Shortfalls in Product and Location*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2010

Gerald Hodge
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia

Abstract

Programmes for publicly assisted housing for senior citizens are making it increasingly possible for the elderly to reside in towns and villages. A study of senior citizen apartment projects in nine small Ontario Towns appraises the quality of housing being produced. Many shortfalls in design and construction are revealed along with out-of-the-way locations for projects. Deficiencies are not easily rectified and responsibility impossible to assign.

Résumé

Les programmes d'assistance publique au secteur du logement pour les personnes du troisième âge encouragent de plus en plus ces derniers à habiter dans des villes et des villages. Une étude sur des projets immobiliers destinés aux personnes âgées dans neuf communautés ontariennes a été mise au point afin d'évaluer la qualité des logements en production. Plusieurs défauts de conception et de construction ont été relevés et l'emplacement isolé de ces projets a également été remarqué. Ces déficiences ne peuvent être palliées facilement et il est impossible d'assigner la responsabilité.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association on Gerontology 1987

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Carp, F.M. (1979), “Improving the Functional Quality of Housing and Environments for the Elderly through Transportation”, in Byerts, T.O. et al. , eds., Environmental Context of Aging, New York, Garland.Google Scholar
Hodge, Gerald and Qadeer, Mohammad (1983), Towns and Villages in Canada. Toronto, Butterworths.Google Scholar
Hodge, Gerald (1963), “The Use and Mis-Use of Measurement Scales in Planning”, Journal of the American Institute of Planners, 29 (May), 112121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodge, Gerald (1984), Shelter and Services for the Small Town Elderly: The Role of Assisted Housing, Kingston, Queen's University School of Urban and Regional Planning. A Report to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.Google Scholar
Howell, Sandra (1980), Design for Aging: Patterns of Use, Cambridge, Mass., MIT Press.Google Scholar
Lawton, M.P. (1977), “The Impact of Environment on Aging and Behaviour”, in Birren, J. and Schaie, K.W., Eds., Handbook on the Psychology of Aging, New York, Van Nostrand, 276301.Google Scholar
Lemke, S. and Moos, R. (1979), The Multiphasic Environmental Assessment Procedure: Preliminary Manual, Palo Alto, Stanford University Social Ecology Laboratory.Google Scholar
Moos, R. and Lemke, S. (1980), “Assessing the Physical and Architectural Features of Sheltered Care Settings”, Journal of Gerontology, 35, 571583.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moos, R. and Lemke, S. (1984), “Supportive Residential Settings for Older People”, in Altman, I., Lawton, M.P., and Wohlwill, J.F., Eds., Elderly People and the Environment, New York, Plenum.Google Scholar
Ontario, Advisory Council on Senior Citizens (1980), Towards an Understanding of the Rural Elderly, Toronto.Google Scholar
Ontario, Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing (1982), Technical Guidelines for Senior Citizen Housing, Toronto.Google Scholar
Wilson, James W. (1983), “Assessing the Walking Environment of the Elderly”, Plan Canada, 21:4, 117121.Google Scholar
Windley, Paul G. (1983), “Commercial Services in Small Rural Towns: Patterns of Use by Older Residents”, The Gerontologist, 23:2 (April), 180184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar