Mark Johnson answers most party invitations with a few questions of his
own. As a quadriplegic who has used a wheelchair for more than 30 years,
he first needs to know whether he'll be able to get into the house and
then negotiate the bathroom while there.
"If the house isn't accessible, guess who's not coming to dinner?" Johnson
said.
But inviting guests with physical limitations to his one-story home in
Alpharetta is no problem, though he admits getting tired of having to do
the dishes.
Ten years ago, Johnson, the director of advocacy for Shepherd Center, worked
with a builder to create a "visitable" home: a ranch plan with
no steps and a roll-in shower. Today, the same ideas that give Johnson
total access to his home are being designed for that part of the aging
population who may not need a wheelchair, but are starting to find steps
and bathtubs more difficult to negotiate.
The EasyLiving Home program encourages builders to design and construct
homes with built-in accessibility features. Since offering a certification
program to builders two years ago, the program has steadily developed a
following of builders and developers who see the value of wider hallways
and doorways, step-free entrances and master bedrooms on the main floor.
"It's not the kind of home that's good just for people with mobility
impairments, " said EasyLiving Home's program director Bonnie Bonham. "It's
a better home for young families with babies in strollers; for active adults
ready to retire but who want to stay in their homes."
Bonham spreads the word about the EasyLiving Home progam by attending meetings
of the Greater Atlanta Home Builders Association and developing contacts
statewide throughout the real estate community.
"Those who are interested soon get very excited about the program, " Bonham
said. "There's a particular interest now among builders about meeting
the needs of active adults, so many are doing some of these things anyway.
We're just showing them how far the benefits can go."
One of the benefits for buyers is having a house they can live in as they
age.
"People want to stay in their homes, " Bonham said, "and
these features will make it so they don't have to leave to go to a nursing
home or take on major renovations down the road."
One builder who has taken up the EasyLiving Home cause is Bobby Lunceford,
owner of Bob Lunceford Properties and a member of the EasyLiving Home advisory
board.
"We specialize in building ranches in all price points because they
are very accessible and can be easily converted for people who have accessibility
issues, " Lunceford said. "When we heard about the EasyLiving
program, which gave us a label and a brand, we signed up immediately."
Among the features buyers can incorporate into a Lunceford home are some
things the builder was doing all along.
"It didn't take a lot to be part of the program since we were already
doing things such as low-step entries, " Lunceford said. "The
transition to no-step entries was easy. We already had wider hallways and
doorways; now we brace into the framing stage places for handrails in the
hallways, next to toilets or in the showers. Putting the light switches
a few inches lower makes a big difference that's not noticeable."
"Now, we're playing with the idea of separating the [electrical] panel
boxes so the main-floor panel is on the main floor."
One of the most interesting aspects of building an EasyLiving Home is that
few people recognize it as such, Lunceford said.
"When you walk in a home that's EasyLiving-designed, you may not even
know it, " he said. "It's more spacious, with an open feel and
no tight hallways. A lot of people think it's a house for the handicapped,
but it actually serves everyone well–the 12-year-old who breaks his
leg playing football; the dad who breaks a hip and has to be in a walker
temporarily. With this kind of house, you don't have to camp out in the
living room."