Curated By dmccarron in Professional Builder · June 1, 2018 · No comments
Tags: Andrew Stebbins, Assisted Living, Austin, Benfield Farms, Bestie Row, Biophilic Design, boomers, Boston, cohousing, Dartmouth College, David Feldman, DiMella Shaffer, Durham, Elderberry CoHousing, Fractals, Geometry, Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies, Hollwich Kushner, Karolyn Mangeot, Kendal on Hudson, Kendal System, Leslie Moldow, Manhattan, Massachusetts, Memory Care, Morningside Gardens, Needham, Netherlands, New Hampshire, New York City, NORCS, North Carolina, North Hill, Northern California, Oberlin College, Ohio, One Wingate Way, Paradise Valley Estates, Perkins Eastman, Peter Fabris, Philippe Saad, Stephen Bailey, Tai Chi, TAT, Texas, The Architectural Team, U.S. Census Bureau, Village Movement, WHO
Since the 1950s, the Baby Boom generation has had a big impact on building: a flurry of elementary and secondary schools in the 1950s to serve a glut of post-war youngsters; colleges ramping up capacity as those school kids approached adulthood; more suburban homes when Boomers settled down with families.
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