Vertical

Aging:

The Future of Aging in

Place in Urban Canada

Throughout most of the twentieth century, seniors were a fairly small proportion of the Canadian population, and most did not live in cities. Today, older Canadians represent the fastest growing segment of the population, and most live in major urban centres.

Currently available housing and care options can perpetuate the sense of loneliness, social and physical isolation, and result in institutionalization as people age. COVID-19 has exposed these shortcomings in a stark and dramatic way.

The trend towards urbanization has given rise to the phenomenon of vertical aging: seniors living in apartment, co-op, and condo buildings that were not originally built for seniors, but have become home to a high density of older adults nonetheless. 

When seniors live right next door to one another, separated by just a wall or a ceiling, it opens up the possibility of re-designing services to make use of these natural densities and deliver a more expansive notion of care.

Vertical Aging is an exploratory design project that presents 3 high-potential concept models that could shape the future of aging in place in urban Canada. 

These models take the decades-old concept of a Naturally Occurring Retirement Community (NORC) – regular residential buildings that have become home to a high density of older adults – and reimagines them within the context of the tech-driven world of today and the near-future. 

Importantly, it does so with due consideration for enabling seniors to age in place with choice and dignity, and without losing sight of what it means to be human.

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