A nongendered, homelike transitional living facility for individuals recovering from substance addiction
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Date
2021
Authors
Battuvshin, Nemuulen
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Abstract
This practicum proposes that transitional living is an effective housing solution for people
dealing with substance abuse to achieve long-term sobriety. A review of current literature
on the topic determined that providing a sense of home allows the typology to differ from
other recovery homes. It dismisses treatment-involved medical settings and instead
promotes recovery by encouraging an everyday living situation and assigning
responsibilities to the clients’ lives. A non-destructive, goal-oriented environment with
onsite vocational programs is proposed through a larger, unified facility to aid in the site
selection process, reduce land capacity, accommodate a larger number of residents, and
provide immediate access to the required onsite amenities. The merging concept develops issues with maintaining a balance between the sense of home and institution. Creating a facility centred around a homelike environment provides clients with a safe and stable place to live and demonstrates growth in the personal and social self. Conveying a sense of home helps clients build and maintain positive relationships, community, and increases productivity levels. Secondly, gender is a critical determinant in the accessibility of recovery services offered by transitional homes due to the primarily gender-specific
regulations. To make the facility accessible to a broader range of clients, combining
genders allows for inclusivity, eliminates isolation, promotes social support, and
normalizes the overall experience through adaptability in social settings. Following that,
privacy and oversight became a challenge and required strategical planning for
mandating a safe environment. Ultimately, the study develops design solutions that
capture an appropriate median between residential and commercial contexts. A user-sensitive environment that responds to individual and social needs pertaining to
inclusivity, boundaries, and psychological incentives, is achieved through interior design
strategies.
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Keywords
Recovery, Gender, Inclusive, Sense of home, Addiction, Transitional living, Community, Healing