One of the latest trends gaining significant popularity in the sphere of home remodeling is renovating the home for the purpose of multigenerational living. While multigenerational living is growing in popularity, it’s not necessarily new. Homes have housed multiple generations since 1870, ebbing and flowing over the years and returning as a trend in modern times.
With nearly 60 million U.S. residents living in the same household, the design and layout of residential spaces are more important than ever. Here, our Gainesville, FL, remodeling experts at Quality DesignWorks offer a home renovation guide for multigenerational living, from bathroom remodel upgrades to additions for optimal results. Start remodeling your home to meet every family member’s needs; contact us today to schedule a showroom appointment!
Choose Floor Plans For All
The floor plan is among the central considerations in Gainesville home remodeling to accommodate multiple age groups, abilities, requirements, and preferences in a single household. Our design-build experts at Quality DesignWorks use universal design to create floor plans for multigenerational living. This design principle focuses on creating and compiling an environment to make it accessible to all people, regardless of their age, ability, and other factors. Whether used with home additions or constructing a home from the ground up, universal design rejects the notion of building for the average person, seamlessly accommodating everyone while still upholding the aesthetic values of beautiful living spaces.
Consider Aging In Your Bathroom Remodel
Along with the kitchen, the bathroom is among the most important rooms for individuals living in a home into their senior years. Without the ability to navigate the bathroom, independent living at home into your senior years is not always possible. Common characteristics of bathrooms, like wet and slippery floors, hard surfaces, sharp corners, and electric outlets, can pose safety hazards, posing a significant danger of injury to individuals with accessibility issues and vulnerabilities. The following bathroom remodeling design modifications can be made during your Gainesville bathroom remodel to ensure all members of the household can be safe and use the restroom without issue.
- Barrier-free shower
- Handheld shower head with hose
- Mounted grab bars for the shower, toilet, and tub
- Task lighting and safety lighting
- Heated flooring options
- Adjustable mirrors for wheelchair accessibility
- Recessed doors for wheelchair access
- Smart faucets operable without touch
Start The Kitchen Remodeling Process
As with bathrooms, the kitchen is a focal point for the Gainesville kitchen remodel, which focuses on multigenerational living in a home. There are several ideas that can transform your kitchen from a one-size-fits-all space into a customized, highly functional room fit for everyone. Our design-build experts can remodel your kitchen to incorporate wider spaces that accommodate wheelchairs and other mobility devices, appliances with customized heights that accommodate sitting and standing, a French door refrigerator for seamless use and convenient storage, table-height seating for preparing food and eating, touch-sensor fixtures, customized storage and appliances with transitional positioning, electronically controlled shelving and cabinetry, and angled features. Contact Quality DesignWorks today to request a showroom appointment and envision what your ideal kitchen remodel can look like!
Adapt Other Rooms In Your Home
Adapting your home for multigenerational living concerns more than the most-used rooms in your living space. Particularly for homeowners with household members of varying ages and needs, other rooms in the home should be considered during a Gainesville, FL, remodel. Consider making changes, such as the following, to other rooms in your home for optimal function, seamless use, and top-level safety for you and your loved ones.
- Doors and windows with stops
- Entryways outfitted with electronic signals for opening
- Open spaces with clear lines of sight
- Wider hallways, doorways, and entryways
- Electrical switches at customized heights
- Easy-open sliding doors
- Lever handles on doors instead of knobs
- No-transition shower with safety features
- Wheelchair and walker-accessible stairs