51社区黑料

MENU

Core Projects

The Inclusive Environments Lab at 51社区黑料 focuses on assessing housing, neighbourhoods, and the built environment for older adults and individuals with mobility, sensory, and cognitive disabilities. Through our projects, we have collaborated with universities such as UBC, Dalhousie University, Universit茅 Laval, Western University, University of Manchester, University of Exeter and Goethe University Frankfurt. We are committed to bridging the gap between academia and practice, actively engaging with community partners. Recent collaborations include the municipalities of Metro Vancouver, and organizations like Brightside Community Homes and Whole Way House, ensuring our research is grounded in real-world insights.

Currently we multiple core projects running parallel in the lab, each with their own methods to explore the built environment:鈥

  1. 鈥婽he Stakeholders鈥 Walkability/Wheelability Audit in Neighbourhoods (SWAN) is a sub-project of the  partnership under the stream of Navigation and Pedestrian Environment
    • Stakeholders鈥 Walkability/Wheelability Audit in Neighbourhoods (SWAN) - Climate builds on the existing project by adding a climate lens to explore how extreme weather, like heat and rain, affects mobility and community access for older adults with disabilities.
  2. Project Sidewalk, a tool developed by the at the University of Washington for collecting street-level accessibility data, has been adopted to gather data from the city of Burnaby
  3. NeighbourABLE Vancouver is project funded by Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) with the goal of developing a tool that assesses 鈥減erson-environment fit鈥濃攈ow well housing and neighbourhoods fit the needs of residents with disabilities鈥
  4. Comprehensive Approach to Enhance Older Adults鈥 Preparedness for Extreme Heat (COPE) 鈥 is an international, multi-method research initiative aimed at understanding factors which supporrt extreme heat preparedness. The study has three componenets, COPE-Daily, COPE-Engage and COPE-Co-create.
  5. Aging in the Right Place is a theoratical framework which considers how older adults can live as long as possible in their homes while recognizing that an older person鈥檚 living environment must support their unique needs, lifestyles, and vulnerabilities.

As the projects under the lab have commonalities in terms of research stream and location, the combined efforts under the lab can achieve the following objectives:鈥

  • Engage with local communities, stakeholders, and people with disabilities in the design and evaluation of neighbourhood environments, ensuring that their voices are integral to the research process鈥
  • Promote collaborative research on neighbourhood inclusivity, combining insights from various projects to build a comprehensive understanding of the built environment鈥檚 impact on diverse populations.鈥
  • Integrate knowledge mobilization activities and knowledge products across projects, enhancing outreach, promoting wider dissemination of findings, and ensuring the efficient use of resources 鈥

鈥婽hrough interdisciplinary research and innovative methods, the lab strives to create inclusive environments that enhance the quality of life for these communities.鈥

SWAN

Learn more about what the project is, its methodology, status and activities.

Learn more

Project Sidewalk

Learn more about what the project is, its methodology, status and activities.

Learn more

COPE STUDY

Learn more about what the project is, its methodology, status and link to project website.

Learn more

SWAN-Climate

Learn more about what the project is, its methodology, status and activities.

Learn more

NeighbourABLE Vancouver

Learn more about what the project is, its methodology, status and activities.

Learn more

Aging in the Right Place (AIRP)

Learn more about what the project is, its methodology, resources and link to project website.

Learn more