Re: Cohousing or not? | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Chuck Maclane (chuck.maclane![]() |
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Date: Mon, 22 Aug 2016 13:40:17 -0700 (PDT) |
Hi Robert, thanks, this is a societal work in progress, we need data but the experiment/revolution is is still in early stages. You point out that there's already a website on coliving: it's almost like the websites sprout up spontaneously, untouched by human hand.
It's a great time for speculation--a couple of points occur to me. One is that there are many more young people who can't afford to buy their own homes (my son among them). Another I've read in a number of pubs that millennials do a lot of their social activities in groups. So, to speculate, could coliving rentals be a ramp to coliving home ownership for many of these folks? Maybe it depends on how cohousing brands itself for these folks. Smaller, cheaper condo housing as an intermediate stage?
Our presentation at the aging in cohousing conference included a finding that for 60 and over cohousers, the two factors that contributed meaningful variance to explaining satisfaction with life are (1)help residents give each other and (2) opportunity to live a sustainable life. The two factors for under 60 folks are (1) opportunities for social relationships and (1) sharing of goods and services. These fit with the idea that, if cohousing can emphasize the message that it can provide the "youngsters" others to hang out with, it could be a good branding tool.
I share your view that there are many potential papers here: maybe if there are more people to glom onto promising data sources as they spring up, there may be opportunities to define a new research area.
Regards, Chuck
On Mon, Aug 22, 2016 at 3:31 PM, Boyer, Robert <rboyer1 [at] uncc.edu> wrote:
-RobertI'd be excited to dive deeper into this discussion with anyone, or perhaps write a paper on it. Let me know.Nevertheless, I think co-living and co-housing are both responses to inadequate and socially fragmented housing options in the mainstream. They're both responses to a similar regime for the mass production of single-unit housing in the USA.Hi Chuck,"Co-living" is a topic I've been interested in for the past few months. Although counting and labeling these types of communities is itself an ambitious undertaking, it appears to me that as many self-labeled "co-living" projects have popped up in the past three years as have co-housing developments in the past thirty. You can find a map of some of them here at coliving.org. There are obvious overlaps like space- and resource sharing, and both models embrace the importance of community and cooperation (at least on paper), but my observation is that a large portion of co-living projects are built to attract young, tech-savvy, college grads, and that few (if any) are built by future residents for the purpose of creating permanent communities. They are almost all rental units, and almost all built by developers, and they are marketed for young singles. There are a small number of large companies (including publicly traded developer, Regus) that are buying properties in high-rent markets like Brooklyn and San Francisco and turning them into techie dorms, and labeling them "co-living." With maybe one exception, no article discussing the phenomenon has articulated a connection to the existing movement for cohousing, ecovillages, or a 300-year old legacy of intentional communities in the United States. I understand that there is debate among co-housing scholars about what makes a "true" co-housing development, but I think a common property of co-housing is that at least some of the residents own the development and/or plan on living there permanently. I've never heard of a co-housing development that is 100% rental.On Mon, Aug 22, 2016 at 2:59 PM, Chuck Maclane <chuck.maclane [at] gmail.com> wrote:______________________________ Friends, I submit the attached Wash Post account of a variation in housing structures that excludes the highly-valued architectural and member-development facets of cohousing while focusing on social/personal relationships--the latter being arguably the most valued cohousing characteristic by participants in our most recent survey study.Do you think this community is on a dimension of cohousing or should be placed on a separate continuum?Thanks, Chuck______________________________ http://lists.cohousingresearch_____
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Cohousing or not? Chuck Maclane, August 22 2016
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Re: Cohousing or not? Boyer, Robert, August 22 2016
- Re: Cohousing or not? Chuck Maclane, August 22 2016
- Re: Cohousing or not? Malcolm Sanford, August 26 2016
- Re: Cohousing or not? Angela Sanguinetti, August 27 2016
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Re: Cohousing or not? Boyer, Robert, August 22 2016
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