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Women design spaces that support life at every stage.
Summary
An interview highlights a designer’s work on inclusive, sustainable interiors across life stages, noting the Aegis Living Lake Union project as the first senior living community to pursue ILFI Living Building Challenge certification and stressing mentorship, diversity, and leadership in the field.
Content
A designer describes choosing architecture and interior design for the creative freedom to shape meaningful experiences. The piece links that early interest to travel, research, and a belief that successful design is rooted in community and context. It traces how interior design has shifted from a secondary role to a strategic discipline that influences project direction and human experience. The account emphasizes designing for varied life stages, with particular attention to senior living and sustainable practice.
Noted details:
- The Aegis Living Lake Union project is described as the first senior living community built to meet the ILFI Living Building Challenge certification standards.
- Collaboration with the International Living Future Institute (ILFI) helped establish a pathway for senior housing to pursue Living Building Challenge certification.
- Designing for aging populations is framed around dignity, autonomy, wellness, and easing emotional transitions into new living environments.
- The piece stresses inclusive design that adapts as people’s needs evolve and serves varied abilities and identities.
- Diversity at the design table is presented as improving outcomes by broadening perspectives and challenging assumptions.
- Mentorship and advocacy are highlighted as critical, with the mentor Karen Bowery noted for advocating equity and professional respect.
Summary:
The account links sustainable, human-centered design with leadership, mentorship, and inclusion, and presents senior living as a field where high-performance sustainability and resident well-being can align. Undetermined at this time.
