Universal Design in Residential Architecture
2023-CRAN01
Included in subscription
1.00
LU|HSW
4.41
Course expires on: 03/05/2026
Description
As architects, we should be familiar with the milestone ADA standards that govern accessibility in public and federally funded facilities; we should also be familiar with how the IBC & ICC A117.1 are used and applied to multi-family residential buildings. How can we use these and other resources to help inform the best way for us to design homes where we can age in place gracefully, without needing to spend an exorbitant amount of money to recreate an environment to suit our future needs?
The presentation will focus on the inclusion of universal design within residential architecture. The course will begin with a touch on the civil rights legislation that helped spur the accessibility codes and standards that we use today, along with the development of those standards and how they come into being, including important distinctions between ADA, IBC, and ICC A117.1.
The 7 Principles of Universal Design and their applicability in the built environment will be discussed. Helpful resources for inclusive design will be shared, like the Housing Design Standards for Accessibility and Inclusion, created by the Kelsey (a non-profit centered around disability-forward housing solutions). Finally, we will discuss many simple, low-cost universal design considerations for residential builds. We will focus on holistic design aspects of the residential environment, rather than simply a checklist of accessible elements to be incorporated.
Hosted by CRAN®.
This session was recorded live on April 13, 2023.
Course expires 3/5/2026
Learning Objectives
Understand important historical legislation that helped to create the accessible standards with which we are familiar today.
Identify the 7 Principles of Universal Design and how they apply to the built environment.
Analyze ways in which we may design the build environment so that it is ‘future-ready’ for its occupants.
Familiarize participants with helpful tools for implementing universal design within residential architecture.
Kate Dailey is a licensed architect in the state of Illinois. Hailing from Philadelphia, she moved to Chicago in 2013 for a “change of scenery”. The scenery change is now permanent. Kate has found a home in the K12 studio at Perkins & Will, and she gains great satisfaction through helping to design thoughtful and considered spaces for students. During the course of her career, she fell in love with a wheelchair user, whom she eventually married. The relationship opened her eyes to the everyday challenges of the physical environment she had previously taken for granted. Inspired, she began to focus on accessibility and universal design within the built environment. She has worked on the accessibility of all types of projects –hotels, schools, big box stores, small banks, cruise ships, and stadiums. Kate delights in sharing her knowledge and experience and acts as an accessibility and universal design expert within Perkins & Will.
Michele Grace Hottel has been practicing Architecture with her own firm, Michele Grace Hottel, Architect since 1994. after working as a consultant with other Architecture and Engineering firms in the Los Angeles and San Diego area. She attended Cal Poly, Pomona and the University of Copenhagen (DIS) for Architecture. Michele is on the AIA CRAN National Advisory Group, the Chair of her local CRAN Chapter. a Commissioner and Subject Matter Expert for the California Architects Board. and a past City of La Mesa Planning Commissioner. One can read her blog and listen to her podcast, "I've never met a woman architect before..."