.....

RE Library Home

Search Library

Add This Library
To Your Web Site

Real Estate Forum

Advertise With Us

Submit Your Articles
To This Library

Library Site Map

Design Trends for Today’s Booming Boomer Market - 8/2/2004 - Home Remodeling Interior Decorating Design

Design Trends for Today’s Booming Boomer Market

While traditional styles and trends dominate in some regions and a more modernist architectural approach is embraced in others, most builders, not to mention the baby boomer market they serve, have one thing in common — an appreciation of excellence.

 

Because most boomers are well educated, technology-oriented and accustomed to a high standard of living, builders need to rise to the challenge, both in their marketing approaches and their home designs.

Some Basics That Boomers Seek

To attract the boomer generation and ensure success, be sure to include the following in your new homes:

  • Superior craftsmanship, the highest quality structural materials, efficiency and innovative home design
  • Lavish amenities and state-of-the-art interior features
  • Creative as well as ample lifestyle space
  • An eclectic interior design “package” that avoids the “in-suite” matched furniture look
  • Cutting-edge health and fitness facilities, access to information and a pedestrian-friendly environment minimizing the use of motor vehicles to complement their diverse lifestyles

    Thanks to immediate access to a virtually unlimited supply of information available on the Internet, in newspapers and magazines and on cable TV, boomers are more home-savvy than previous generations.

    But, while technology enables boomers to do their “homework” in their search for a new home or active adult community, most consumers have trouble negotiating some of the most significant in-home intricacies — such as proportion, scale and use of color.

    While each of these elements can be appealing in and of itself, this does not necessarily mean they can all work together in harmony. Pulling these elements together to create an appealing product is just one example of why and how qualified interior design and selection center professionals are needed.

    Design Trends That Will Make Your Products Appealing

    During my years designing for the active adult market, evaluating its trends and scrutinizing its evolution, I have developed the following list of simple, yet necessary design approaches to key spaces to help create product that appeals to today’s boomers:

    • Discovery: Evaluate your product with help from a professional designer through a “discovery” process of exterior/interior analysis. This will save you time and resources, and ultimately result in a superior product where construction-friendly options are properly showcased.

    • Foyer: The entrance should set the tone for the home’s interior and present a clear focal point of what’s to come. The larger the foyer, the larger the total living area of the home should be.

    • High Ceilings: Ceiling heights should maximize the home’s square footage, make the home appear airy and project your product’s superior architecture. Ten-foot ceilings throughout are popular, with coffered ceiling accents in foyers, owner’s suits and baths. Family rooms can include a combination of 10-foot ceilings and two-story spaces accented with generous transom windows.

    • Kitchen: The trend in the kitchen is to create a space that serves as the home’s informal daily gathering place; therefore, there should be no compromising on design or budget. Since boomers spend plenty of money in options during the pre-construction phase, builders should offer state-of-the-art conveniences in the kitchen. This includes high-end cabinets and counters, cook tops with designer tile backsplashes, extended counters at a “non-bar” height and well conceived lighting.

    • Living Room: For single-family homes, the national trend is to render a smaller, library-sized area with a wet/dry bar feature and comfortable seating. In a condominium or penthouse, a more traditional approach is needed that features ample seating, generous windows and a fireplace and TV appropriately positioned.

    • Dining Room: Formal dining remains popular, allowing designers to craft fresh, fully-functional dining areas to entertain guests.

    • Powder Room: Though a relatively tiny space, the powder room can serve as the equivalent of fine art, especially when modern furniture, quality cabinets, state-of-the-art sinks and toilets and decorative lighting are included.

    • Owners’ Retreat & Bath: Inspired by palatial European hotels and guest villas that American travelers covet, these grand rooms represent old world indulgence bathed in 21st-century products. The challenge is to create separate areas for sleeping, reading or exercising and accenting them with tantalizing appointments such as fireplaces, a dry bar with under-counter refrigerator and an abundance of strategically-placed windows to maximize the view while also maintaining privacy.

    • Guest Room & Bath: As a design and architectural trend, the guest room is a relatively new but popular addition to the home. It works well for the extended guest or someone who merits VIP treatment. This space should be over-scaled to accommodate furniture and an adjoining bath that adheres to Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) principles.

    • Gathering Room: Is it a family room or a great room? No matter, the gathering room is all about lifestyle and features ample space for practical furniture placement, comfortable TV viewing, a fireplace and plenty of windows.

    • Rail System: Newer appointments such as elaborate iron rails are quickly becoming popular not only with consumers but with builders, too, because of their easier accessibility and more reasonable pricing.

    Like architects, community planners, construction personnel and sales associates, the role of the interior designer will be tested like never before as the boomer generation heads into what will be the busiest buying period in U.S. history. Working in lasting partnership, all members of the building industry stand to gain unprecedented success in satisfying the specific requirements of today’s affluent active adult home buyer as well as the “booming” market about to erupt.

    Cathie Daly is president of Medford, NJ-based Design East, Inc. Daly and her team of design professionals apply strategic planning to model homes, sales environments, community clubhouses and design centers. Daly is the 2004 president of the New Jersey Builders Association’s Senior Housing Council, a local council of the NAHB Seniors Housing Council. She also has served on numerous national subcommittees. She can be reached by e-mail or at 609-654-9675.


    Related Articles:
    Residential Remodelers Enter 2004 With High Expectations | Green Growth In Remodeling
    Visalia, Calif. Nonprofit, Developer Team to Provide Affordable Housing | Home Buyers Seeking More Privacy, Harmony
     

    Article reprinted with permission Copyright ©. Article presentation format, categories, and content management system Copyright © Nemmar.com.

    .....


    Copyright © 1990-2007 All Rights Reserved - Terms and Conditions Our copyright is very strictly enforced!
    Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape