Old idea for new homes: living in it now, later
Aging experts say current building trends in the Portland
area won't allow houses and their owners to grow old together
Two trends, one involving land use and the other an aging
population, are heading for a collision that's bound to affect
residents in the region's southwest suburbs and beyond.
Locally as well as nationally, the term "aging in place" is
popping up more frequently as millions of baby boomers face
retirement. The term embraces the notion that retirees, through
modifications to their homes, can remain in their residences as
they get older.
Those designs hark to the single-level, ranch-style houses
that defined suburban construction in the 1950s and '60s. They
call for such features as wider, wheelchair-accessible doorways
and master bedrooms and laundry facilities on the main floor.
The designs not only eliminate stairs -- something some senior
citizens find burdensome -- but also require larger footprints
than contemporary designs.
Therein lies much of the problem, particularly in the
Portland area, where a lack of land for new housing inside the
urban growth boundary increasingly dictates that houses must go
up, not out.
"More and more of our clients are at their wits' end," said
Mark Stewart, a custom-home designer who is moving his offices
from Tualatin to Sherwood. "Every square inch matters around
here. As a result, people are having to move farther and farther
outside Portland if they want any chance to find enough land to
accommodate their needs as they get older."
Many large-scale production builders have not made any move
to factor "aging in place" into their designs, Stewart said.
Much of that has to do with limited land supplies. But the
dearth of such designs, at least among production builders, can
also be attributed to their need to build as much as they can,
as fast as they can, he said.
"The first one who does it will be ahead of everyone else,"
he said. "Everyone else will be completely missing the boat."
That boat, in terms of sheer size, seems more like an ocean
liner. For the next 25 years or so -- a generation's worth of
time -- the country will be getting 3 million to 4 million "new"
60-year-olds annually.
Yet many boomers don't appear to have given much thought to
housing designs suitable for aging in place, said Kent Burtner,
spokesman for Washington County's Disability, Aging and Veteran
Services Department.
"What we see are these baby boomers building their starter
castles," he said. "What are they going to do if they are
incapacitated at some point? Sooner or later they'll wake up to
it when houses with aging-in-place amenities are selling like
hotcakes."
Some builders finding a niche
Others are giving the matter plenty of thought.
On a parcel adjacent to King City, for example, homebuilder
Steve Brown plans to start construction in early 2006 on 30 or
more units that will incorporate aging-in-place features.
Brown, who owns Tigard-based Timberland Homes, said he
expects at least half of his target market to consist of
empty-nest seniors.
"We did a lot of research and determined that there just
wasn't much of this type of product out there," he said. "In a
world dominated by big production builders, little companies
like us have to find a niche or disappear."
Even so, trying to fit ground-floor master bedrooms into
houses on lots measuring 40 feet across isn't easy, he said.
"Even 6 inches is a lot of room to try to add to the end or
width of a house," Brown said. "There's only so much you can
pour into a one-gallon jug."
A variation on that theme is taking shape at Villebois, the
planned community under construction at the former Dammasch
State Hospital in Wilsonville. Rudy Kadlub, whose Costa Pacific
Communities is overseeing development, said a variety of housing
styles will allow seniors to move from, say, a two-story
detached house to a one-level condominium blocks away.
Of the estimated 2,700 housing units that will be built at
Villebois, 400 to 500 units will be condos.
Kadlub said he would like to see more single-level houses in
the area for aging in place. However, soaring land values,
combined with zoning laws requiring high densities, all but make
that prohibitive, he said.
Ranch-style houses gaining value
As a spinoff effect, that shortage is bound to drive up the
cost of three- and four-bedroom ranch-style houses -- Kadlub
calls them "ramblers" -- in older neighborhoods, he said.
Jim Chapman, president of Tigard-based Legend Homes, agrees
that limited lot sizes will continue to force housing styles up
and not out. But he took issue with the notion that people will
remain in any one house long enough to age there.
"I see the population as being much more mobile than that,"
he said. "Very seldom do we see people staying in one of our
developments for much longer than about five years."
"...Certified Realty, has a slightly
different take."
Roy Widing, principal broker for Wilsonville-based
Certified
Realty,
has a slightly different take. More and more, he said, buyers
reaching their 50s are showing concern for the floor plan
they're getting.
One recent sale, he said, could be completed only because the
buyers insisted on a master bedroom on the main floor.
"It's definitely a growing area that builders and remodelers
are focusing on," said Kevin Curry, spokesman for the Home
Builders Association of Metropolitan Portland. "They know that
buyers may not need features like wider doorways right away, but
15 years down the road, they will."