Aging-in-place home design means planning your home so you can live in it safely and comfortably for decades — through changes in mobility, vision, and strength — without it ever looking like a “medical” space. For Kitsap County homeowners, the highest-impact moves are single-floor living, a curbless walk-in shower, wider doorways (32–36 inches), lever handles, and good lighting. Done as part of a thoughtful design rather than a reactive retrofit, these features blend invisibly into a beautiful home. The goal isn’t a hospital look — it’s a home that quietly works for every stage of life.
Aging in place is the ability to stay in your own home as you grow older, rather than moving to assisted living. It’s overwhelmingly what people want: about 75% of middle-aged and older adults say they strongly want to remain in their current home as long as possible (AARP). The design approach that makes it possible is universal design — a philosophy developed by architect Ronald Mace for spaces usable by the widest range of people without special adaptation. Good universal design serves a parent with a stroller, a recovering knee surgery, and an 80-year-old equally well.
Universal design rests on seven principles, and a well-designed Kitsap County home quietly satisfies all of them:
When AARP asked older Americans which universal-design features matter most, the priorities were clear:
| Feature | Share who rate it important |
|---|---|
| Wider doorways & hallways | 67% |
| Nonslip flooring | 64% |
| Step-free (curbless) showers | 57% |
| Grab bars & handrails | 55% |
Source: AARP survey of older Americans on universal design features. Design specs below follow NAHB universal-design guidance.
The reason to think about this during a remodel or new build — even if you’re decades from needing it — is that these features are far easier and cleaner to integrate into a planned design than to add after a fall or health event. Reinforced shower walls, a curbless drain, and a main-floor suite are simple design decisions on paper today and disruptive construction projects later. Designing for the long term also protects the aesthetics: an architect-led plan folds accessibility into the home’s proportions and finishes so it reads as intentional design, not a series of add-ons.
It’s designing or remodeling a home so you can live in it safely and comfortably as you age, accommodating changes in mobility, vision, and strength. It draws on universal design principles so the home works for people of all ages and abilities.
Surveys of older Americans rank wider doorways and hallways (67%), nonslip flooring (64%), step-free showers (57%), and grab bars and handrails (55%) at the top. A single-floor living option and good lighting are also high-impact.
Doorways should clear at least 32 inches, and 36 inches is the comfortable standard. That width lets wheelchairs and walkers pass easily and also makes moving furniture and everyday life simpler for everyone.
No. When accessibility is designed in from the start rather than retrofitted, features like curbless showers, wide hallways, and lever handles blend seamlessly into a beautiful, modern home — universal design is meant to be invisible.
Whether you’re planning a remodel, an addition, or a new home on the Kitsap Peninsula, aging-in-place thinking makes your home work better now and for decades to come. Bluefoot Design brings a considered, context-driven approach to accessible, beautiful homes across Poulsbo, Bainbridge Island, and Port Orchard, including dedicated aging-in-place consultations. Explore our design services and interior design work, then contact Bluefoot Design to start the conversation, or call 360-602-2965.