Home and Family > Home Improvement > Ten Convenience Built-Ins Thatll Help Seniors And The Disabled Live Independently
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Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Carol Abrahamson
Planning to remodel, repair or build a new home? Looking for some
innovative, unusual — but powerful — universal design features? We
can help! We started collecting over 1,000 uncommon, affordable
convenience built-ins in 1998, when we first began writing books and
consulting to help people have truly extraordinary — but affordable —
homes. Here are some of our favorite ideas that’ll change your life via
how they enable independent living. Add any of these to your next
project, and you’ll be on your way toward creating a home that’s truly
beyond the ordinary!
• Motion-sensor faucets. These are especially handy where hands will
often be dirty or full. They also deliver water at a preset temperature that
kids or slow-to-react family members may appreciate. No more risk of
getting scalded!
• A single-lever faucet control, for ease in adjusting water flow and
temperature with one hand. (It’s especially inconvenient to have two-
fisted, separate hot and cold controls at the kitchen sink.) This can help
you reduce wasted hot water, can be visually marked so family
members know where to position it for safe hot water temperatures, and
is easy to use after arthritis has started to affect your fingers and hands.
• A central vacuum system. Its parts are not as heavy to push as most
freestanding vacuum cleaners.
• A garbage disposal activated by a pressure-button switch that’s inches
away from the faucet, so it’s accessible without your bending to open a
cabinet or walking several steps to flip a switch.
• Well-planned task and reading lighting that doesn’t create shadows.
Don’t forget lights that illuminate countertops or are mounted under
upper cabinets.
• Lots of electrical outlets for your holiday decorations, both indoors and
outside, so everything plugs in nearby. No point in having the confusion
or hazards of extension cords, powerstrips or overloaded circuits.
• Magnetic drawer and cabinet locks that release and latch via a single
remote-control button that controls an entire room or outdoor area. This
is the least awkward and most secure type of childproof lock we’ve
seen, especially if you mount the control unit high on a wall where
adults can easily see and reach it while kids cannot. Grandparents with
arthritis will especially applaud this system, compared to the common
plastic door locks that require considerable dexterity to release. (These
magnetic locks also secure drawers or cabinets in overnight guestrooms
that you use when your guests are gone, or in any rental properties you
own and store some possessions in.)
• Wall-mounted intercoms in every room and outdoor living area (don’t
forget the garage), for talking to anyone on your property without having
to physically walk over to them. This also eliminates using what might be
dirty or full hands to dial and hold a cell phone you might use to call
people elsewhere in the house.
• A light switch or knee-level motion sensor at the top and bottom of
every stairway that controls adequate lighting from above. Motion
sensors are especially handy wherever your hands are often too full to
easily reach for a switch. That light from above is more important for
people with vision problems than light from fixtures that are down at the
stair level.
• A bathroom near the family entrance for quick cleanups for limiting the
mess that gets tracked inside when someone’s coming home dirty. It’ll
also prevent rushing through the house — and risking a fall — when
nature calls while you’re working outside or just arriving home.
Like this article? Then you’ll love our books chock-full of uncommon,
affordable convenience built-ins that increase your quality of life and
your home’s resale value! We also offer a free e-book at
www.extraordinaryhomes.com: The 34 ExtraOrdinary Home Principles:
Over 70 Fabulous, Affordable, Innovative Ideas That’ll Improve Your Life
and WOW You!
© Copyright 2005 by Carol Abrahamson/ExtraOrdinary Homes. All rights
reserved.
Carol Abrahamson consults, writes and makes presentations about
more than 1,000 of these fabulous features that can improve your life,
add value to your home and make you the talk of the town. She spent
years researching them via thousands of sources just so you can quickly
and easily use them to create your affordable, extraordinary Home of
Your Dreams™. Learn more about her work via http://
http://www.extraordinaryhomes.com or carol@extraordinaryhomes.com.
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