Oh, a storm is threat’ning/ My very life today/ If I don’t get some shelter/Oh yeah, I’m gonna fade away/
–“Gimme Shelter” by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards
The site has two central parts:
I. The theme
II. Digressions (anything not related directly to the theme; for the purpose of the site my daughters Joanna and Amelia [you may ask “You really regard your family as a digression?), my stories, essays, career achievements, poems, and other flights of fancy and whimsy are off message.
Now and then being a nerd, as I am, can get in the way or as the Tibetan Book of the Dead notes sometimes you (by which I mean I) become so intense that the intensity becomes “intense pride, and the pride turns into an ice-cold environment which reinforced by self –satisfaction begins to get into the system. It does not allow us to dance or smile or hear the music.” At the risk of not hearing the music, I will leave you, dear reader, to find order in Diversions as you will. Right now, the task at hand is the order the theme.
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Navigating the theme: No shelter from the storm
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Where do I want to go?
To a neighborhood which must be developed to serve as a global model for providing independent living so elderly and disabled individuals can age in place.
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What would the neighborhood consist of?
a) It would consist of an experimental residence for an individual or an individual family. The example of the Blueroof Experimental Cottage in McKeesport, PA is a good example. The cottage consists of a one story residence built on inexpensive land in a downtown burned out section of town where rotting buildings could be razed and a community developed.
b) The individual residence could be built out of factory housing (the fashionable term for mobile home) where sensors and other off-the-shelf technology can be embedded in the walls to monitor and protect the resident. Including building the foundation, each residence can be constructed in three days.
c) Technology in the residence would include:
- Security system to protect elderly and disabled residents in high-crime areas such as exist throughout the Rust Belt of Pennsylvania—where the neighborhood would gradually change to a family friendly area attracting economic growth.
- Motion detectors to monitor falls throughout the residence, especially high risk areas such as the shower.
- Computer voice simulation which combined with a wireless communication system can have, in effect, the walls of the building calling family or other emergency services for help.
- Monitoring devices to detect, for example, whether the refrigerator has been opened and to call for help after an adjusted period of time. Example of a computer generated call, “Hello, your grandmother has not opened her refrigerator in over 24 hours. You might want to look in on her.”
- Remote medical monitoring, including taking blood pressure and other health measurements and transmitting the results automatically to a physician’s office.
- Computer terminals and other equipment to provide the resident with job training (one is never too old to learn) and work opportunities from home.
d) A research facility at a major university, such as Penn State, where the Immersive Construction (ICon) lab develops a 3-D model of the experimental model so stakeholders can suggest design changes.
Stakeholders would include:
- Prospective residents of future neighborhood (or elsewhere) housing
- Members of the architectural, engineering, and construction (AEC) community
- Caregivers
The research facility would also be able to process data collected at the experimental facility, such as remote medical monitoring and activities of daily living (ADL) so future construction can benefit.
e) Creation of an inter-generational accessible community with shopping, recreation, and other services which make a community a community.
Stay tuned for further navigational aids which link posts on this site to the issues raised here and which answers the question: Why is creation of a new kind of neighborhood (with a variety of other options to be presented) so critical to dealing with the housing shortage throughout the world as the largest generation in history begins to retire in an environment where a previous generation of elderly and disabled individuals (including, of course, veterans) are so poorly served at a great expense to society and at a loss of dignity among people whose talents are not being developed adequately.]
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I tell you love, sister, it’s just a kiss away/ It’s just a kiss away….
–“Gimme Shelter” by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nU4aiqvyt4&feature=watch_response