Asia Pacific - Australia - Belgium : Nl / Fr - France - Germany - Italy - UK - Canada - Can. Quebec - Portugal - Spain - USA - New Zealand - International - Others
Document sans nom
   
 
Document sans nom
 
01/7/2009
 
  Submit your news
  Advertise on this site
  tMM's sponsor
  Take us as sponsor
 
  NEWS
All articles
All interviews
Associations
Automotive - Transport
Cosmetics - Beauty
Demography
Domotic / Real estate
Employment
Insurance - Bank
Technologies
Leisure - Tourism
Health
Retail industry
Housing
Services - Housecare
Gerontology
Medias
Marketing - Commu.
Retirement
Wellness - Sport
Others
 
  INFO BY SOURCE
International Federation on Ageing
International Longevity Centre
Add your source here
 
 
  RESSOURCES
  Market reports
  Trends documents
  Books
  Data Base
  Online trainings
  NEW Web Seminars
   
 
  PARTNERS
  Agetimes Institute
   
 
  SELECTED EXPERTS
  Frederic Serriere
  Herve saulnier
   
  Arjan in’t veld - hollande
  Brent green - usa
  Chuck Nyren
  Dick Stroud
  Hiro Murata
  Kurt Medina
  Mart goyette - québec
  Ravissant
  Sylvain desfosse - québec
   
  Add your name here
 
  ABOUT US
Senior Strategic
Web Site
Contact
 

 

 


 

 

Housing shortage hits ageing Aussies

Document sans titre Demand for public housing from people aged over 65 is expected to increase by 50 per cent in the 10 years to 2016, bringing many challenges for public housing providers.

According to the final report on older people in public housing by the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute (AHURI) Swinburne-Monash Research Centre, public housing will need to provide an additional 4391 dwellings for older people nationally each year to 2016 to match current levels of demand.

The highest increase in demand will come from the 85 plus age group.

More than 100,000 older Australians (those aged over 60) are in housing stress. And with Australia’s increasingly ageing population, the situation is expected to worsen.

Increased rents in the private rental sector and the anticipated demise of one significant social housing option for older people – independent living units managed by aged-care organisations – will compound these challenges.

Sean McNelis, research fellow with Swinburne’s Institute for Social Research and the report’s principal author, said the lives of some older people – those previously living in private rental accommodation – are positively transformed through public housing, which they regard as an affordable housing option.

“Older people love their public housing and the feeling of community within their complex of units,” Mr McNelis said. “They like that their public-housing complex only houses older people, its convenience to shops, amenities and transport, and that maintenance and modifications are done when needed.”

The authors interviewed 38 older public-housing tenants as part of the research on issues facing public-housing providers.

But the report also warned that some public-housing stock, because of its location, poor condition, quality and small size, will soon become unacceptable to older people. Further, the demand for ground-floor and modified dwellings by older tenants wanting to age-in-place will increase.

McNelis said mounting evidence from a series of AHURI reports on older people points to an urgent need for major new investment in social housing to meet the housing needs of older people with low incomes and few assets.

“Older people are no longer restricted to aged-specific public housing. Rather, with their children leaving home, people are ageing-in-place in what were public-housing family homes.”

The report revealed that the key concern of older people with regard to housing is their quality of life. They expect more of public housing than just a place to live.

“A key challenge for public-housing providers and for the Australian, state and territory governments is to expand the role for public housing from one that simply provides accommodation to a role in which housing for older people opens up opportunities for social networking and participation in a range of social, cultural and political activities,” McNelis said.

 

 

By KS Date 21-09-2008

 

Print this article | React to this article

 

 

 

 

Document sans nom

Company | Contact | Advertisement | Press | Agetimes Institute

Wellington - Sydney - Seoul - Tokyo - Shanghai - Singapore - Hong Kong - New Delhi
© SeniorStrategic - Global Headquarters : 22 rue Docteur Greffier 38000 Grenoble France - Phone : 33 1 46 36 53 27 - Email : info(ate)thematuremarket(dot)asia