1 / 22

Betsy Morris Research Director Cohousing Association of the US Berkeley Cohousing

Betsy Morris Research Director Cohousing Association of the US Berkeley Cohousing. Living in Cohousing -A Model for a Sustainable Planet Affordability Strategies Saturday, July 21. Overview. Frequently Asked Questions about Affordability Strategies used in cohousing communities

Download Presentation

Betsy Morris Research Director Cohousing Association of the US Berkeley Cohousing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Betsy Morris Research Director Cohousing Association of the US Berkeley Cohousing Living in Cohousing -A Model for a Sustainable Planet Affordability Strategies Saturday, July 21

  2. Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  3. Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  4. Overview • Frequently Asked Questions about Affordability • Strategies used in cohousing communities 5. Summary of options • Construction • Mortgage and Rent • Operating costs 4. Pros and Cons 5. Federal requirements 6. Other options Are there grants? 8. Conclusions Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  5. Cohousing in the USOverview 1987-2006 • Inspired by book by architects Katherine McCamant & Charles Durrett • Based on Danish experience from 1970s • Resident-led; actively participate in the design and operation of their own neighborhood of homes • Typically structured as condominium homeownership, financed by private mortgages • Extensive and carefully designed shared facilities • Conscious attention to fostering community relationships and effecive decision-making • Physical design encourages social contact in common space, and respects private in individual homes Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  6. Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US Cohousing Overview (cont)

  7. Cohousing Overview (cont) Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  8. Cohousing Examples • Quayside Cohousing, Vancouver, BC • Urban • Mixed use; multi-family condo & rental flats Source: Canadian cohousing network • Rosewind Cohousing, Port Townsend, WA • Rural small town • Lot model development • Primarily retirees • Rosewind.org Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  9. Typical Features • Condominium legal structure • Privately owned homes (attached) • Average unit 1100 SF • Average 3000 SF common house • 26 units • 60 residents Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  10. Who Lives in Cohousing? • Meltzer survey (1996) • 85% college educated • 90% white • Technical and helping Professionals dominate • Large # of self-employed and part-time • Majority adults ages 30-50 Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  11. What is Senior Cohousing? • Older residents who choose to grow older in a self-managed, close-knit community • Using universal design, each home can transition from an active lifestyle to support new needs • Conscious planned co-care agreements with limits • Common house offers space for residential home care aides and family visits • Coordinate with senior services in the area Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  12. Senior Cohousing in Denmark • Cohousing comprises 1% of total housing stock (since 1972) • Senior cohousing (since late 1980s) is fastest growing type of cohousing • National government support, but limited direct financing • Spearheaded by senior quality of life organization • Streamlined 5-step process over 24 months • Now promoted through nonprofit and for-profit developers Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  13. Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  14. Isn’t cohousing cheaper to build than market rate cohousing? Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  15. Affordable Housing Options • Construction Costs • Operating Costs • Ownership/Rental Costs • HOA dues • Subsidies Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  16. Affordable Housing Options • Energy Efficiency • Assure that electric and gas meters are installed and that there is accountability by owner or tenant for use • Use properly sized and designed sealed combustion boilers or furnaces and distribution systems or other low-energy use heating • Use tankless water heaters, indirect water heaters, sealed combustion water heaters, or solar hot water heaters • Specify compact fluorescent fixtures and educate tenants about their energy savings. Provide collection for spent bulbs to be disposed of properly. • Specify Energy Star appliances throughout • Avoid or minimize air-conditioning with natural ventilation or other passive cooling strategy • Consider renewable energy sources such as geothermal or photovoltaics (or pre-wire to be added when feasible) using research grants and rebates Source: http://www.designadvisor.org Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  17. Affordable Housing Options • Limited equity homeownership • Rentals with income caps • Shared housing (rental) • Cooperatively owned units • Nonprofit land trust • Affordable housing tax credits • Section 8 subsidized units • Habitat for Humanity units • Public Housing Authority or nonprofit ownership of some units • Units designated and subsidized for developmentally disabled tenants • Silent second mortgage • Internal tradeoffs among homeowners Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  18. Affordable Housing OptionsConstruction Phase • Step 8. Conduct cost analyses early and oftenWhy is this step important? Development is an iterative process between the aspirations and goals for a project and the realities of the available budget. Too often critical design components - components that may impact the long term viability of a project - are eliminated to save money. To make the problem worse, this "trade-off" often occurs at a point when the design is fairly far advanced; i.e., when it's too late to adjust the design and the only option is to eliminate specific components. Close attention to cost from the earliest stages of the project will help ensure that the evolving design can be built for the available budget. Some tradeoffs will be inevitable as the process unfolds, but if costs are analyzed and controlled on an ongoing basis, these tradeoffs can be minimized so as not to affect critical design components. • www.designadvisor.org Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  19. Affordable Housing OptionsLand Trust • Dearborn Commons (not built) - land trust Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  20. Resources on Cohousing Affordability • http://www.designadvisor.org • Institute for Community Economics • National Low-income Housing Coalition, Washington • National Coop Bank • Neighborworks Institute • Habitat for Humanity • Enterprise Foundation • Fannie Mae Foundation • Banks • City or State trust • www.building-cost.net. R.S. Means also provides some information gratis at their website http://www.rsmeans.com. Marshall & Swift's site is www.marshallswift.com. For analyses based on material and quantity "take-offs," software tools are available from these companies and from the Enterprise Foundation. Craftsman can be reached at 1-800-829-8123 or www.craftsman-book.com. R.S. Means is at 800-448-8182 or www.rsmeans.com. Marshall & Swift is at 800-452 2367 or www.marshallswift.com. The Enterprise Foundation is at 410-964- 1230 or www.enterprisefoundation.org. Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

  21. Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US Research Studies on Aging and Community 1. The Roseto Effect -- Researchers from Harvard and Yale found that the men in a close-knit community had less heart attacks.2. Population Based Study of Social and Productive Activities as Predictors of Survival Among Elderly AmericansA coalition of Harvard, Yale and Rush Institute for Healthy Aging researchers found that social and productive activities were equally as significant as physical exercise in promoting longer, healthier lives in Americans 65 +.3. Anticipated Support From Neighbors and Physical Functioning During Later LifeA SUNY researcher has found that the expectation of neighborliness keeps older adults more functional.4. Social Participation and Health in a Community Rich in Stock of Social CapitalFinnish researchers from the Social Insurance Institution of Finland found that members of the Swedish-speaking minority living in Finland live longer, healthier lives due to more active and meaningful social lives than their Finnish counterparts.5. Maintaining Cognitive Health in an Ageing (sic) SocietyResearchers from France, the U.K. and the U.S. find social engagement, intellectual stimulation and physical activity play a key role in maintaining cognitive health.6. Participating in Social Activities Helps Preserve Cognitive Function: An Analysis of a Longitudinal, Population-Based Study of the ElderlyAn international group of researchers finds community social activities have even higher impact than family relations on maintaining and improving cognitive function among the elderly.7. Lack of Social Support and Incidence of Coronary Heart Disease in Middle-Aged Swedish MenResearchers find lack of social support for men as significant as smoking as a leading indicator for coronary heart disease. Compiled by ElderCohousing.org

  22. Cohousing ResourcesKeep in Touch! • Cohousing Association of the US - Cohousing.org • Virtual tour • Communities directory • E-zine articles • Classifieds • Coho-L email listserve • Tours, trainings, events, books • Links to professionals • Senior Cohousing Facilitator Training, April 2006 • National Cohousing Conference, North Carolina, June, 2006 • The Cohousing Company - Cohousingco.org • ElderCohousing.org • AgingInCommunity.com • Fellowship for Intentional Communities - www,ic.org • Communities Magazine • National directory of intentional communities CoHousing Neighbors out for a stroll in Golden, CO (Photo by Julia Rainer) www.cohousing.org Elizabeth W. Morris, PhD Cohousing Association of the US

More Related