The Ancient Town Residential Environment of the Elderly in Xiangxi Tujia: Survey, Questions, and Recommendations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Study Object
2.3. Survey
2.3.1. Behavioral Observation
2.3.2. Interviews
- (1)
- Physiological characteristics
- (2)
- Psychological characteristics
- (3)
- Interviews of the residential environment
2.3.3. Questionnaire Surveys
2.4. Field Measurements
3. Result and Discussion
3.1. Behavioral Observation Result
3.2. Interviews Results
3.2.1. Physiological Characteristics Interviews Results
3.2.2. Psychological Characteristics Survey Results
3.2.3. Interviews of Residential Environment Results
3.3. Questionnaire Surveys Results
3.4. Field Measurements Result
3.4.1. CO2
3.4.2. PM2.5
3.4.3. PM10
3.4.4. Light Intensity
4. Problems and Recommendations
4.1. The Elderly in the Old Towns Have Multiple Needs
- (1)
- Indoor lighting environment: A good lighting environment can guarantee the elderly’s light requirements and the safety and convenience of various behavioral habits. The research found that the natural lighting environment in ancient towns is poor, and the artificial lighting environment is inconvenient due to economic reasons.
- (2)
- Indoor air quality: The elderly are not sensitive to air pollution, but due to their aging organs, long exposure to highly polluted air can threaten their health.
- (3)
- Residential safety: For indoor stairs, floors, furniture, bathrooms, and other spaces, there is no barrier-free design. The dangers of accidental situations easily threaten the elderly due to their declining physical functions.
- (4)
- Socialization: The elderly in ancient towns are often indoors for a long time when they cannot farm or socialize over long distances. The lack of children’s company also accentuated the strong social needs of the elderly.
- (5)
- Privacy: The elderly often need external help in their lives. The design and construction of traditional Tujia houses do not consider their privacy.
- (6)
- Cultural identity: Several traditional dwellings of the Tujia family have aging problems. Cracking and breakage of traditional architectural wooden components also occurs. The decaying familiar environment of the elderly increases their sense of loneliness and reduces their sense of cultural identity.
4.2. Ancient Town Residences Lack Elderly-Friendly Design
- Floor plan function:
- Lighting environment:
- Indoor air quality:
5. Conclusions
- Behavioral observations showed that the elderly’s daily life in the ancient town included resting, communicating, cooking, farming, fitness, and recreation, involving all functional rooms. The resting and toileting behaviors, farming behaviors, cooking activities, fitness and recreation, and communication activities of the elderly in traditional three-room dwellings accounted for 42%, 23%, 14.5%, 12.5%, and 8% of the elderly’s daily life, respectively. The farming and selling activities, cooking activities, communication activities, and fitness and recreation activities of the elderly in storehouse dwellings accounted for 29.58%, 13.3%, 12.08%, and 7.14% of the elderly’s daily activities, respectively.
- The interview results indicated that the elderly in the ancient town have varying degrees of shoulder and knee joint damage in terms of physiological characteristics and must use crutches to get around. Furthermore, the elderly are less sensitive to indoor air pollution. In terms of psychological traits, the elderly exhibit a strong sense of frustration and loneliness. More than 70% of the elderly believe that the living environment of the hall, bedroom, bathroom, fire pit, and patio has an impact on healthy living; 45% believe that the safety and convenience of their living environment should be improved. While improving the existing living environment, seniors are also concerned about the cost and preservation of traditional elements.
- The results of the questionnaire indicated that 68%, 76%, and 53% of the elderly believe that the threshold, gutter, and stalls on both sides of the entrance have an impact on their daily lives. More than 80% of the elderly were displeased with the indoor sound environment, and more than 70% were displeased with the residence’s traffic. More than 85% of the seniors think that traditional wooden components and space are the sources of cultural identity that the traditional dwellings provide them. The results of the questionnaire match those of the interviews. It should be mentioned that seniors are more concerned with the convenience and safety of the entrance, hall, bedroom, and other areas of frequent daily activities.
- The monitoring results showed that the indoor average CO2 concentration and average PM2.5 concentration and average PM10 concentration, and natural light intensity during the fire activities do not meet the Chinese standard values. The average CO2 concentration in more than half of the rooms exceeded 1000 ppm, and the average indoor PM2.5 concentration was 350–600 µg/m3, about 4.7–8 times the Chinese standard. The average PM10 concentration exceeded 400 µg/m3, which was roughly 3 times the Chinese standard value. Long-term exposure to highly polluted indoor environments puts the elderly at risk of disease. Effective mitigation strategies are urgently required for the elderly’s indoor air environment in the Xiangxi ancient towns.
- Recommendations for the living environment improvement are proposed to respond to the multiple needs of the elderly and problems of the living environment in the ancient town. This study can provide practical information to systematically improve the living environment of the elderly in ancient towns. It also includes the design of needs-based targeting and a reference to evaluate other types of residential environments for the elderly.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Instrument | Parameter | Accuracy | Measuring Range | Resolution |
---|---|---|---|---|
AZ-77597 Carbon dioxide analyzer | CO2 | ±30 ppm or ±5% (0~5000 ppm) | 0~10,000 ppm | 1 ppm |
BR-SMART128S Air quality instrument | PM2.5, PM10 | ±20 µg/m3 | 0~999 µg/m3 | 1 µg/m3 |
Kurzanleitung testo 540 | Light intensity | ±3 Lux | 0~99,999 Lux | 1 Lux |
Pollutant | CO2 | PM2.5 | PM10 |
---|---|---|---|
Average value standard | 1000 ppm | 50 µg/m3 | 150 µg/m3 |
Room | Bedroom | Hall | Kitchen | Living Room |
---|---|---|---|---|
General Activities | 100 lux | 60 lux | 150 lux | 150 lux |
Fine Activities | 200 lux | 75 lux | 200 lux | 300 lux |
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Basic Features | Comment | Question |
---|---|---|
Physical Condition | Body disease | Cervical spondylosis, lumbar spondylosis, knee arthropathy, shoulder joint disease, other diseases, no such disease |
Ability to act | Walking freely, crutches, wheelchair, mobility aid | |
Exercise | 5 min, 15 min, half an hour, over an hour | |
Daily work | Farming, work, household chores, caring for grandchildren, selling | |
Sensory ability | Hearing | Severe hearing loss, affecting life, severe loss, not affecting life, no significant |
Smell | Difficult to distinguish gas, significant recession, able to distinguish odors, no significant | |
Sight | Seeing things blurry, seeing colors blurred, easy eye fatigue, discomfort with variations in light and darkness | |
Tactile | Thermosensory recession, tactile recession, piezosensory recession, nociceptive recession | |
Psychological characteristics | Security | Very lonely, a little lonely, not lonely at all |
Loneliness | Extremely lacking, normal, very good | |
Belongingness | Yes, no, not sure | |
Negative frustration | Becoming a burden to children, physical condition, respect from others, having nothing to do, other |
Functional Space | Question |
---|---|
Entrance gate | Safety, convenience, satisfaction, size |
Hall | Light environment, floor plan, functional rationality, satisfaction |
Store | Furniture, functional rationality, environment, size, decoration |
Traffic space | Safety and convenience of stairs and corridors |
Bedroom | Sound environment, light environment, furniture, plumbing, and electrical facilities, functional layout, indoor traffic, decoration |
Storage room | Location, size, convenience, security, furniture |
Toilet | Location, decoration, equipment, environment |
Fire pit | Safety, pollution situation, functional rationality |
Patio | Water tanks, equipment, communication spaces, storage spaces |
Num | Comment | Question |
---|---|---|
1 | Quality of life | Bathing space, storage space, companion space, medical space, activity space, entertainment space, sacrificial space |
2 | Cultural identity | Traditional structure, fire pit, sacrificial space, patio, fun space |
3 | Social respect | Private bedroom and bathroom, cook on your own, vending activities, neighborhood communication, suitable furniture. |
4 | Impact of entrance on daily life | Availability of door thresholds for accessibility, availability of gutters for traffic, size of the entrance buffer space, door opening difficulty, levelness of the floor |
5 | Impact of the hall on daily life | Dimension, ground, equipment, plan layout, storage space |
6 | Hall satisfaction | Light environment, wind environment, thermal environment, acoustic environment, air quality |
7 | Stores satisfaction | Recognition of signs, reasonableness of plan layout, openness of view, length of traffic flow lines, ease of operation of equipment |
8 | Impact of traffic space on daily activities | Dimension of traffic space, the material of stairs, illumination of the traffic space, height and position of handrails, complexity of traffic flow |
9 | Impact of traffic space on daily activities | Layout, hygiene, ease of operation of household appliances, availability of auxiliary facilities, opening or not of windows |
10 | Bedroom environment | Light environment, thermal environment, wind environment, sound environment, air quality |
11 | Toilet | Traffic flow, materials, with or without barrier-free design, odor, privacy |
12 | Fire pit | Light environment, wind environment, thermal environment, sound environment, thermal insulation performance, air quality |
Residence Type | Construction Time | Building Material | Living Conditions |
---|---|---|---|
Zuozi dwelling | 1980s | Wood, green tiles | 2 seniors |
L-shaped dwelling | 1980s | Wood, green tiles | 2 seniors, 1 child |
lower store and upper house dwelling | 1980s | Wood, green tiles | 2 seniors, 2 children |
front store and back house dwelling | 1980s | Wood, green tiles | 2 seniors, 2 children |
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Zhang, F.; Shi, L.; Liu, S.; Shi, J.; Cheng, M.; Xiang, T. The Ancient Town Residential Environment of the Elderly in Xiangxi Tujia: Survey, Questions, and Recommendations. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 10820. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710820
Zhang F, Shi L, Liu S, Shi J, Cheng M, Xiang T. The Ancient Town Residential Environment of the Elderly in Xiangxi Tujia: Survey, Questions, and Recommendations. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(17):10820. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710820
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Fupeng, Lei Shi, Simian Liu, Jiaqi Shi, Mengfei Cheng, and Tansheng Xiang. 2022. "The Ancient Town Residential Environment of the Elderly in Xiangxi Tujia: Survey, Questions, and Recommendations" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 17: 10820. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710820
APA StyleZhang, F., Shi, L., Liu, S., Shi, J., Cheng, M., & Xiang, T. (2022). The Ancient Town Residential Environment of the Elderly in Xiangxi Tujia: Survey, Questions, and Recommendations. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(17), 10820. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710820