Living in an Age-Friendly Community: Evidence from a Masterplanned Development in Southwest Sydney
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Park Central
- It being situated in close proximity to a range of amenities—including healthcare facilities (esp. Campbelltown Hospital), two very local shopping centres (Macarthur Square and Marketfair Campbelltown), social infrastructure (esp. the Campbelltown Catholic Club) and a public transport hub (esp. Macarthur Railway Station)—identified as important features of age-friendly communities [58];
- The provision, within the development itself, of a “[d]iverse housing mix catering to different lifestyles and age groups” (p. 2, [59]) in order to “retain local residents as their housing needs change” (p. 14, [56]). This dwelling mix comprises apartments, terraced homes, live/work spaces, small lot homes (‘garden homes’), as well as IRT Macarthur (a co-located retirement village and residential aged care centre comprising 262 self-contained independent living apartments in varying configurations and a 60-bed assisted care facility [60]);
- The provision of a range of shared and community facilities within the development itself, including service retail, cafes/restaurants, and the 10.5 ha landscaped open greenspace ‘Marsden Park’ (which, from an age-friendly perspective, is importantly a contained park located in the centre of the development (p. 9, [16]));
- Some attempts within the development itself to create a “walkable community within the context of the ‘car dependant’ south western Sydney region” (p. 14, [56]). These included, for instance, the inclusion of dedicated footpaths linking residential streets in the development (Figure 2), and of some ‘shared space’ residential streets [61] connecting the development to the wider urban area (Figure 3).
2.2. Data Collection and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Environmental Affordances of Age-Friendly Communities
[W]e’ve got all the medical facilities we need here, three shopping centres in the local area, and a nice place to go and walk if you need to walk.
I find it pretty easy [Living in Park Central] actually because it’s all easy access to the shops and everything, everything is close by, shop, train station. It’s friendly to have neighbours everywhere and yes, it’s very convenient.
Basically, it’s close to everything, close to transport, to the shops, to the public hospital; basically, everything is within walking distance, which is what really appealed to us.
The other main reason for doing it [moving to Park Central] is if someone can’t drive one day or were injured, we’ve got all the medical facilities we need here, three shopping centres in the local area, and a nice place to go and walk if you need to walk.
[A] lot of people couldn’t believe that we were buying a house with stairs. But I always said we’ve always got a bedroom downstairs if that’s what we needed, and it’s a big ensuite, a big toilet, shower, basin so you coud take a wheelchair in there if you wanted to.
The village units are built, all of them with doors either a metre or very close to a metre wide, to have facility for access by wheelchairs. …In the unit, everywhere is accessible by wheelchair, including the bathroom. The bathroom was built with handrails down the side of the toilet, grab rails in the shower. The shower is big enough to shower three or four people. There is nothing to step over into the shower, you can walk straight in.
Sustainability, from my way of thinking in the sense that …the better the house was built for the older person, the longer the person can stay in there at no additional cost to the government. That’s my way of thinking, a part of sustainability.
- the gradient of the streets between Park Central and the shopping centre (with one street referred to as ‘Heartbreak Hill’ on account of its steepness);
- the lack of designated crossings on busy routes within Park Central, and the density and speed of traffic on those routes, some of which had become local ‘rat runs’;
- the lack of visibility for crossing those busy routes (in particular caused by cars parked tightly on both sides of the road (Figure 4));
- a lack of dropped kerbs for crossing roads (for instance when travelling in a wheelchair or by mobility scooter, or with a pram, buggy or shopping trolley);
- those dropped kerbs that are provided being experienced as too steeply inclined to be used without tipping over by motorised wheelchair users;
- the perceived inhospitableness of some the designated crossings over arterial roads that separate Park Central from the local shopping centre (in particular in terms of the width of these crossings (Figure 5) and the short duration of their pedestrian signal phases);
- the lack of pavements on one side of the road in parts of Park Central (Figure 6);
- and regular instances of pavement parking (resulting in blocked walkways) on some streets in Park Central (Figure 7).
This is one of the worst [roads to cross] right here, it’s near a hospital and there are sick people going across to the park all the time and they’re slow, but the cars come flying. It’s a bit dicey.
With the private hospital, they need a pedestrian crossing there. People coming from the park area into the private hospital, they’ve got to negotiate the narrow street with the cars moving all the time. …It’s difficult for people to see if they’ve got bad eyesight or if they’re on crutches, or whatever it might be. …You see ladies with prams and two little kids and I’ll tell you, the cars don’t stop for them, and there are a lot of little kids over that new area, you see them in the park. Someone’s going to get skittled.
Most of the [traffic] lights [at crossings]…favour the main road. …[N]ot [allowing] sufficient [time to cross] for some people. Especially for some of our residents with walkers and that, because if you walk with them, it is very slow. I wouldn’t like to stop there, but there is another [traffic light] button [on the island] in the middle [of the crossing].
You get halfway across and you’ve got to hurry up. That’s always been a problem around here. …You know what it is, that openness [see Figure 5]. Even these lights and the lights on the corner, you feel like everyone’s looking at you, that it’s odd to walk across.
3.2. Facilitating Age-Friendly Communities
[I]n the early years [of the development], Landcom had a thing going where, in conjunction with Uniting Church, they held various functions for all residents, both in the retirement village and Park Central. And through that, there was interaction, like Mothers’ Day, Fathers’ Day, different functions, going down to Canberra for the Floriade, but that’s now ceased, the funding has stopped.
- distributed, with voluntary assistance from residents, newsletters communicating upcoming community events and activities in and around Park Central;
- organised an open-air movie night in Park Central;
- ran workshops for Park Central residents—e.g., a ‘Going Potty’ workshop (to show residents how they can grow vegetables and small fruit in pots on their balconies) and a Christmas craft-making workshop;
- set-up and coordinated a working group to try and establish a community garden in Park Central;
- helped facilitate and promote a multi-week ‘Living Smart’ course designed to provide participating Park Central residents “with the practical knowledge and skills to take action in their own homes and around the community” (p. 1, [72]). An explicit objective of this course was “[s]upporting and strengthening community relationships” to enable residents “to embrace a connected approach to living, so that long lasting solutions for a quality life now and into the future can be created” (p. 1, [72]).
[T]hey [non-retirement village Park Central residents] do support us when we have things on. When had our White Elephant stall, there was a lot from over there, because they think we’ve got good stuff, see!
The things that Sophie [the Community Development Facilitator] arranged, like mother daycare and so on, if it came that they were [taking place] here [in the retirement village] and couples were sitting beside you, they would talk and if the rapport was there and the friendship was…. That’s exactly what happened with us on the bus trip [that Sophie organised].
I think it [the Facilitator’s Community Development work] does help. What she was doing was trying to bring this into a community.
3.3. The Social Production of Age-Friendly Communities
[T]he first eight residents in [the retirement village] decided they needed to coordinate. They set up what they called a coordinating committee or some such thing. By the time we had 60 or 70 people in there [the retirement village], and that was only a matter of three months and that’s when we came in, they decided they needed to formalise it. We had a meeting of those 60 or 70 people and they agreed to have a Residents’ Committee. They elected eight people to be the Residents’ Committee and that committee set up a constitution … So then we had a Residents’ Committee who had a chairperson, secretary and treasurer and six other members and they’re elected annually.
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- Suitably qualified retirement village residents organising and operating, voluntarily, a weekly bus service from the retirement village to the local shopping centres, thereby enabling residents whose access to those shops was constrained or impeded (see Section 3.1) to circumscribe some of those constraints or impediments. This service was enabled by IRT conditionally permitting self-care residents to use the retirement village bus, though this required residents to volunteer as drivers for any social trips they wanted to organise. In addition to the weekly shopping service, residents also organised and operated other regular social outings using the IRT-supplied bus.
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- Residents petitioning, albeit unsuccessfully, for the provision of a ‘high care’ unit in the vicinity of the retirement village.
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- Residents working for local community organisations in the wider local area and sitting on local area committees—e.g., one research participant reported how she volunteered with the local RSL club and chaired the local Senior Issues Group which reports to Campbelltown City Council.
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- The organisation of 3–4 ‘block parties’ a year to enable residents on each block to socialise with one another.
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- A group of residents organising a group visit to a former resident who had recently been moved to a high care facility that was not local to the retirement village.
A Councillor came to look at it one day to see how bad it was and […] an engineer from the Council, and I arranged for it to be very busy that day. But eventually it [the crossing] went in and it’s been used every day.
4. Conclusions
is essentially descriptive. It provides considerable detail about…a range of approaches to fostering age-friendly communities—in terms of models of governance—and a range of outcomes regarded as age-friendly in terms of both physical and social characteristics. However, there has been limited documentation of the effectiveness of specific approaches or evaluation of the impact of specific processes or outcomes on older people’s lives.(p. 118, [5])
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- The observation that community activities were often scheduled during work hours, thereby systematically excluding people of working age. Should a community facilitation approach be adopted elsewhere, therefore, care should be taken about when events are scheduled to take place, as well as who they are organised for.
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- A concern (reported by one research participant) about the Community Development Facilitator working for an agency of a religious organisation (Uniting Church Australia). For the research participant, such an affiliation is “going to exclude people straight away”.
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- A communication strategy—which primarily comprised distributing newsletters to residents setting out upcoming community events—that was not always effective, with one research participant who was unaware of the activities organised by the Community Development Facilitator describing how “junk mail…just goes straight in the bin”.
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- The Community Development Facilitator being unable to secure from the developer a piece of enclosable land on which to plant a community garden (a type of intervention that has been shown to have numerous significant active aging benefits [78]).
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Jones, A.; Parham, S. Living in an Age-Friendly Community: Evidence from a Masterplanned Development in Southwest Sydney. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 1312. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021312
Jones A, Parham S. Living in an Age-Friendly Community: Evidence from a Masterplanned Development in Southwest Sydney. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(2):1312. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021312
Chicago/Turabian StyleJones, Alasdair, and Susan Parham. 2023. "Living in an Age-Friendly Community: Evidence from a Masterplanned Development in Southwest Sydney" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 2: 1312. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021312
APA StyleJones, A., & Parham, S. (2023). Living in an Age-Friendly Community: Evidence from a Masterplanned Development in Southwest Sydney. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(2), 1312. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021312