Abstract

Architects shape future dwellings and built environments in ways that are critical for aging bodies. This article explores how assumptions about aging bodies are made manifest in architectural plans and designs. By analysing entries for an international student competition Caring for Older People (2009), we illustrate the ways in which aged bodies were conceived by future architectural professionals. Through analysing the architectural plans, we can discern the students' expectations and assumptions about aging bodies and embodiment through their use of and reference to spaces, places and things. We analyse the visual and discursive strategies by which aged bodies were represented variously as frail, dependent, healthy, technologically engaged and socially situated in domestic and community settings, and also how architects inscribed ideas about care and embodiment into their proposals. Through our analysis of these data we also attend to the non-representational ways in which design and spatiality may be crucial to the fabrication of embodied practices, atmospheres and affects. We end by reflecting on how configurations and ideologies of care can be reproduced through architectural spaces, and conclude that a dialogue between architecture and sociology has the potential to transform concepts of aging, embodiment and care.

Highlights

  • Bornat and Jones have called for researchers of later life to explore visions of the future as they are imagined in the daily activities of people in a variety of settings and at different stages of the life-course

  • In examining constructions of aging bodies in architectural competition entries and turning the lens to the perspective of student architects, this article opens a new avenue for research on cultural images of aging

  • The designs do not exclusively focus on the narrative of decline, as they are attentive to the lived bodily experience of later life, perhaps reflecting an increased awareness of ‘empathic’ design (Imrie & Luck, 2014) and efforts to imbue spaces with vitality and feeling

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Summary

Introduction

Bornat and Jones have called for researchers of later life to explore visions of the future as they are imagined in the daily activities of people in a variety of settings and at different stages of the life-course. We examine how young architects anticipate the future by exploring their designs of care homes for people in later life.

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