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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 7, 2026

Methodology for Establishing a Community-Wide Life Laboratory for Capturing Unobtrusive and Continuous Remote Activity and Health Data
11:21

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Published on: July 27, 2018

Wellbeing and aging in person-home-assemblages.

Sander Lambrix1, Luise Stoisser2, An-Sofie Smetcoren2

  • 1ArcK-Designing for More, Faculty of Architecture and Arts, Hasselt University, Agoralaan, Building E, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium; Society and Ageing Research Lab, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Pleinlaan 2, 1050 Brussel, Belgium.

Journal of Aging Studies
|June 5, 2026
PubMed
Summary

Older adults and their homes co-evolve, with wellbeing emerging from dynamic person-home assemblages. This perspective moves beyond individualistic views, recognizing the home environment as an active participant in aging.

Keywords:
ArchitectureAssemblageEnvironmental/material gerontologyHome environmentWellbeing

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Area of Science:

  • Environmental Gerontology
  • Material Gerontology
  • Sociology of Aging

Background:

  • The home environment is crucial for aging individuals' wellbeing.
  • Current research often adopts individualistic, human-centered approaches to wellbeing in later life.
  • Existing models neglect the relational aspects of wellbeing within material, spatial, and temporal contexts.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To adopt a material gerontology perspective to understand wellbeing in relation to aging and the home environment.
  • To conceptualize the relationship between aging inhabitants and their homes as "person-home-assemblages".
  • To explore how these assemblages influence and are influenced by wellbeing over time.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of three case studies involving transitional life events and architectural changes.
  • Integration of data from inhabitant housing biographies and architect interviews.
  • Inclusion of material representations of home environments to analyze person-home assemblages.

Main Results:

  • Wellbeing emerges in specific, situated ways from person-home assemblages.
  • Wellbeing actively shapes the evolution of these person-home assemblages over time.
  • Findings integrate aging persons, architectural spaces, objects, landscapes, and housing ideals.

Conclusions:

  • The home environment is an active agent in the aging process, not merely a passive backdrop.
  • Aging persons and their home environments co-evolve, demonstrating a dynamic relationship.
  • This person-home assemblage framework offers a more holistic understanding of wellbeing in later life.