How cohousing can make us happier and live longer Grace Kim

Loneliness.

All of us in this room
will experience loneliness

at some point in our lives.

Loneliness is not
a function of being alone,

but rather, a function
of how socially connected you are

to those around you.

There could be somebody
in this room right now

surrounded by a thousand people

experiencing loneliness.

And while loneliness
can be attributed to many things,

as an architect,

I’m going to tell you today
how loneliness can be the result

of our built environments –

the very homes we choose to live in.

Let’s take a look at this house.

It’s a nice house.

There’s a big yard, picket fence,

two-car garage.

And the home might be
in a neighborhood like this.

And for many people around the globe,

this home, this neighborhood –

it’s a dream.

And yet the danger of achieving this dream

is a false sense of connection

and an increase in social isolation.

I know, I can hear you now,

there’s somebody in the room
screaming at me inside their head,

“That’s my house,
and that’s my neighborhood,

and I know everyone on my block!”

To which I would answer, “Terrific!”

And I wish there were
more people like you,

because I’d wager to guess
there’s more people in the room

living in a similar situation

that might not know their neighbors.

They might recognize them and say hello,

but under their breath,

they’re asking their spouse,

“What was their name again?”

so they can ask a question by name
to signify they know them.

Social media also contributes
to this false sense of connection.

This image is probably all too familiar.

You’re standing in the elevator,

sitting in a cafe,

and you look around,

and everyone’s on their phone.

You’re not texting or checking Facebook,

but everyone else is,

and maybe, like me,
you’ve been in a situation

where you’ve made eye contact,

smiled and said hello,

and have that person
yank out their earbuds

and say, “I’m sorry, what did you say?”

I find this incredibly isolating.

The concept I’d like
to share with you today

is an antidote to isolation.

It’s not a new concept.

In fact, it’s an age-old way of living,

and it still exists in many
non-European cultures

around the world.

And about 50 years ago,

the Danes decided to make up a new name,

and since then,

tens of thousands of Danish people
have been living in this connected way.

And it’s being pursued
more widely around the globe

as people are seeking community.

This concept

is cohousing.

Cohousing is an intentional neighborhood
where people know each other

and look after one another.

In cohousing, you have your own home,

but you also share significant spaces,
both indoors and out.

Before I show you
some pictures of cohousing,

I’d like to first introduce you
to my friends Sheila and Spencer.

When I first met Sheila and Spencer,
they were just entering their 60s,

and Spencer was looking ahead
at the end of a long career

in elementary education.

And he really disliked the idea

that he might not have
children in his life

upon retirement.

They’re now my neighbors.

We live in a cohousing community
that I not only designed,

but developed

and have my architecture practice in.

This community is very intentional
about our social interactions.

So let me take you on a tour.

From the outside, we look like
any other small apartment building.

In fact, we look identical
to the one next door,

except that we’re bright yellow.

Inside, the homes are fairly conventional.

We all have living rooms and kitchens,

bedrooms and baths,

and there are nine of these homes
around a central courtyard.

This one’s mine,

and this one is Spencer and Sheila’s.

The thing that makes this building
uniquely cohousing

are not the homes,

but rather, what happens here –

the social interactions that happen
in and around that central courtyard.

When I look across the courtyard,

I look forward to see Spencer and Sheila.

In fact, every morning,
this is what I see,

Spencer waving at me furiously
as we’re making our breakfasts.

From our homes, we look down
into the courtyard,

and depending on the time of year,

we see this:

kids and grownups in various combinations

playing and hanging out with each other.

There’s a lot of giggling and chatter.

There’s a lot of hula-hooping.

And every now and then,
“Hey, quit hitting me!”

or a cry from one of the kids.

These are the sounds of our daily lives,

and the sounds of social connectedness.

At the bottom of the courtyard,
there are a set of double doors,

and those lead into the common house.

I consider the common house
the secret sauce of cohousing.

It’s the secret sauce

because it’s the place
where the social interactions

and community life begin,

and from there, it radiates out
through the rest of the community.

Inside our common house,
we have a large dining room

to seat all 28 of us and our guests,

and we dine together three times a week.

In support of those meals,
we have a large kitchen

so that we can take turns
cooking for each other

in teams of three.

So that means, with 17 adults,

I lead cook once every six weeks.

Two other times, I show up
and help my team

with the preparation and cleanup.

And all those other nights,

I just show up.

I have dinner, talk with my neighbors,

and I go home, having been fed
a delicious meal

by someone who cares
about my vegetarian preferences.

Our nine families
have intentionally chosen

an alternative way of living.

Instead of pursuing the American dream,

where we might have been isolated
in our single-family homes,

we instead chose cohousing,

so that we can increase
our social connections.

And that’s how cohousing starts:

with a shared intention

to live collaboratively.

And intention is the single most
important characteristic

that differentiates cohousing
from any other housing model.

And while intention is difficult to see

or even show,

I’m an architect, and I can’t help
but show you more pictures.

So here are a few examples to illustrate

how intention has been expressed

in some of the communities I’ve visited.

Through the careful
selection of furniture,

lighting and acoustic materials
to support eating together;

in the careful visual location
and visual access

to kids' play areas around
and inside the common house;

in the consideration of scale

and distribution of social gathering nodes

in and around the community
to support our daily lives,

all of these spaces help
contribute to and elevate

the sense of communitas

in each community.

What was that word? “Communitas.”

Communitas is a fancy social science way
of saying “spirit of community.”

And in visiting
over 80 different communities,

my measure of communitas became:

How frequently did residents eat together?

While it’s completely up to each group

how frequently they have common meals,

I know some that have eaten together
every single night

for the past 40 years.

I know others

that have an occasional potluck
once or twice a month.

And from my observations, I can tell you,

those that eat together more frequently,

exhibit higher levels of communitas.

It turns out, when you eat together,

you start planning
more activities together.

When you eat together,
you share more things.

You start to watch each other’s kids.

You lend our your power tools.
You borrow each other’s cars.

And despite all this,

as my daughter loves to say,

everything is not rainbows
and unicorns in cohousing,

and I’m not best friends
with every single person in my community.

We even have differences and conflicts.

But living in cohousing,
we’re intentional about our relationships.

We’re motivated
to resolve our differences.

We follow up, we check in,

we speak our personal truths

and, when appropriate,

we apologize.

Skeptics will say that cohousing
is only interesting or attractive

to a very small group of people.

And I’ll agree with that.

If you look at Western cultures
around the globe,

those living in cohousing
are just a fractional percent.

But that needs to change,

because our very lives depend upon it.

In 2015, Brigham Young University
completed a study

that showed a significant
increase risk of premature death

in those who were living in isolation.

The US Surgeon General
has declared isolation

to be a public health epidemic.

And this epidemic
is not restricted to the US alone.

So when I said earlier

that cohousing
is an antidote to isolation,

what I should have said

is that cohousing can save your life.

If I was a doctor, I would tell you
to take two aspirin,

and call me in the morning.

But as an architect,

I’m going to suggest
that you take a walk with your neighbor,

share a meal together,

and call me in 20 years.

Thank you.

(Applause)

孤独。

我们在这个房间里的所有人
都会

在我们生命中的某个时刻感到孤独。

孤独
不是独处

的功能,而是

您与周围人的社交联系程度的功能。

这个房间里可能有人现在

被一千个人包围着,正在

经历孤独。

虽然孤独
可以归因于很多事情,但

作为一名建筑师,

我今天要告诉
你孤独

是我们建造环境的结果

——我们选择居住的房子。

让我们来看看这所房子 .

这是一个不错的房子。

有一个大院子,栅栏,

两车位车库。

房子可能就
在这样的街区。

对于全球许多人来说,

这个家,这个社区——

这是一个梦想。

然而,实现这个梦想的危险

是一种虚假的联系感

和社会孤立的增加。

我知道,我现在可以听到你了,

房间里有人在
他们的脑海里对我尖叫,

“那是我的房子
,那是我的社区

,我认识我街区的每个人!”

我会回答,“太棒了!”

我希望有
更多像你这样的人,

因为我敢打赌
房间里有更多的人

生活在类似的情况下

,可能不认识他们的邻居。

他们可能会认出他们并打招呼,

但在他们的呼吸声中,

他们正在问他们的配偶,

“他们的名字又是什么?”

这样他们就可以通过姓名提出问题,
以表明他们认识他们。

社交媒体也助长
了这种虚假的联系感。

这张图恐怕再熟悉不过了。

你站在电梯里,

坐在咖啡馆里

,环顾四周

,每个人都在打电话。

你不是在发短信或查看 Facebook,

但其他人都是

,也许,像我一样,
你一直处于

一种你已经进行过眼神交流,

微笑着打招呼,

然后让那个人
拔出

耳塞说 ,“对不起,你说什么?”

我觉得这令人难以置信的孤立。

我今天想与大家分享的概念

是隔离的解毒剂。

这不是一个新概念。

事实上,这是一种古老的生活方式

,它仍然存在于世界各地的许多
非欧洲文化中

而大约 50 年前

,丹麦人决定起一个新名字,

从那时起,

数以万计的丹麦人
一直以这种相互联系的方式生活。

随着人们寻求社区,它正在
全球范围内得到更广泛的

追求。

这个概念

是共同的。

Cohousing 是一个有意为之的社区
,人们彼此认识并

互相照顾。

在共同住房中,您拥有自己的家,

但您也共享重要的空间,
无论是室内还是室外。

在给你们看
一些同居的照片之前,

我想先把你们介绍
给我的朋友希拉和斯宾塞。

当我第一次见到 Sheila 和 Spencer 时,
他们刚刚步入 60 多岁,

而 Spencer 正展望
着漫长的基础教育职业生涯即将结束

他真的不喜欢退休

后可能没有
孩子的想法

他们现在是我的邻居。

我们生活在一个共同居住的社区
中,我不仅设计,

而且

开发了我的建筑实践。

这个社区非常
注重我们的社交互动。

所以让我带你参观一下。

从外面看,我们看起来像
任何其他小型公寓楼。

事实上,我们看起来
和隔壁的一样,

只是我们是亮黄色的。

在里面,房子是相当传统的。

我们都有客厅和厨房、

卧室和浴室,中央庭院

周围有九个这样的房子

这个是我的

,这个是斯宾塞和希拉的。

使这座建筑
独特地共同居住

的不是房屋,

而是这里发生的事情——


中央庭院内外发生的社会互动。

当我穿过院子时,

我期待看到斯宾塞和希拉。

事实上,每天早上,
这就是我所看到的,

Spencer 在我们做早餐时愤怒地向我挥手致意

从我们的家中,我们
俯视庭院

,根据一年中的不同时间,

我们会看到:

孩子和大人以各种组合

在玩耍和闲逛。

有很多笑声和喋喋不休。

有很多呼啦圈。

时不时地,
“嘿,别打我了!”

或其中一个孩子的哭声。

这些是我们日常生活

的声音,也是社会联系的声音。

在院子的底部,
有一套双门

,通向普通的房子。

我认为普通住宅是共同居住
的秘诀。

这是秘诀,

因为它是
社交互动

和社区生活开始的地方,

并从那里辐射
到社区的其他部分。

在我们共同的房子里,
我们有一个大餐厅,

可以容纳 28 个人和我们的客人

,我们每周一起吃饭 3 次。

为了支持这些餐点,
我们有一个大厨房,

这样我们就可以三人一组轮流

彼此做饭。

所以这意味着,我有 17 名成年人,

每六周领一次厨师。

另外两次,我出现
并帮助我的团队

进行准备和清理工作。

而所有其他的夜晚,

我只是出现了。

我吃过晚饭,和我的邻居聊天,

然后我回家,被关心我素食偏好的人喂
了一顿美味的饭菜

我们的九个
家庭有意选择

了另一种生活方式。 我们没有

追求美国梦

,我们可能
在单户住宅中被孤立,

而是选择了同居,

这样我们就可以增加
我们的社会联系。

这就是共同住房的开始:

以共同的意图

合作生活。

意向是将共同

住房与任何其他住房模式区分开来的最重要的特征。

虽然意图很难看到

甚至表现出来,但

我是一名建筑师,我忍不住要给
你看更多的照片。

所以这里有几个例子来说明

我访问过的一些社区是如何表达意图的。

通过精心
挑选家具、

照明和声学材料
来支持一起吃饭;

在公共房屋周围和内部的儿童游乐区的仔细视觉位置
和视觉访问

考虑

到社区内和周围的社交聚会节点的规模和分布
以支持我们的日常生活,

所有这些空间都
有助于促进和提升每个

社区的社区意识

那是什么词? “社区。”

Communitas 是一种花哨的社会科学方式
来表达“社区精神”。

在访问
了 80 多个不同的社区时,

我对社区的衡量变成了:

居民一起吃饭的频率如何?

虽然这完全取决于每个小组

他们共同进餐的频率,但

我知道

在过去的 40 年中,有些人每晚都一起吃饭。

我知道

其他人每月偶尔吃一两次便饭

根据我的观察,我可以告诉你,

那些更频繁地一起吃饭的人,

表现出更高水平的社区。

事实证明,当你们一起吃饭时,

你们开始
一起计划更多的活动。

当你一起吃饭时,
你会分享更多的东西。

你们开始看彼此的孩子。

您借给我们您的电动工具。
你们互相借车。

尽管如此,

正如我女儿喜欢说的那样,

一切都不是彩虹
和独角兽共同居住

,我也不
是我社区中每个人的好朋友。

我们甚至有分歧和冲突。

但是生活在同居中,
我们对我们的关系是有意识的。

我们有
动力解决我们的分歧。

我们跟进,我们登记,

我们说出我们的个人真相,

并在适当的

时候道歉。

怀疑论者会说,
同居只对极少数人感兴趣或有吸引力

我会同意这一点。

如果你看看
全球的西方文化,

那些住在同居的
人只是一小部分。

但这需要改变,

因为我们的生活都依赖于它。

2015 年,杨百翰大学
完成的一项研究

表明

,与世隔绝的人过早死亡的风险显着增加。

美国外科医生
已宣布

隔离为公共卫生流行病。

而且这种
流行病不仅限于美国。

所以当我之前

说同居
是隔离的解毒剂时,

我应该说

的是同居可以挽救你的生命。

如果我是医生,我会告诉
你吃两片阿司匹林

,早上给我打电话。

但作为一名建筑师,

我会
建议你和你的邻居一起散步,

一起吃饭,

20年后给我打电话。

谢谢你。

(掌声)