designing with cultural awareness

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DESIGNING WITH CULTURAL AWARENESS R acial and ethnic diversity will continue to grow and define the U.S. population into the future. Accord- ing to the Pew Research Center, by 2055 the nation will not have a single racial or ethnic majority, and most of the population growth is expected to be linked to new Asian or Hispanic immigration. This isn’t a pattern that home builders and designers can afford to ignore. Right now, the influx of multicultural buyers is most noticeable in major urban centers such as Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. Pew indicates that Asia has replaced Latin America, including Mexico, as the biggest source of new immigrants, a fact borne out by the sources consulted for this article. (The term “Asian” is used here to denote people of Chinese, Japanese, Taiwanese, Vietnamese, and similar origins, while “East Indian” encom- passes Pakistani and other South Asian nationalities.) New homes must offer flexible floor plans that allow buy- ers to assign specific purposes to their living space. Options for such features as prep kitchens and full multigeneration- al suites are essential. In some locations, buyers may prefer elevations that are more traditional than contemporary. It may also mean that most or all of a builder’s floor plans are designed according to feng shui, the Chinese art and practice of creating harmonious surroundings, or vaastu shastra, a traditional Hindu system of architecture. By Susan Bady, Senior Editor Builders are introducing new floor plans that respond to the needs of an increasingly diverse population 52 Professional Builder March 2017 [ DESIGN] PHOTO: CASEY BROADWATER

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Page 1: DESIGNING WITH CULTURAL AWARENESS

DESIGNING WITH CULTURAL AWARENESS

Racial and ethnic diversity will continue to grow and defi ne the U.S. population into the future. Accord-ing to the Pew Research Center, by 2055 the nation will not have a single racial or ethnic majority, and most of the population growth is expected to be linked to new Asian or Hispanic immigration.

This isn’t a pattern that home builders and designers can afford to ignore. Right now, the infl ux of multicultural buyers is most noticeable in major urban centers such as Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. Pew indicates that Asia has replaced Latin America, including Mexico, as the biggest source of new immigrants, a fact borne out by the sources consulted for this article. (The term “Asian” is used here to denote people of Chinese, Japanese, Taiwanese, Vietnamese, and similar origins, while “East Indian” encom-passes Pakistani and other South Asian nationalities.)

New homes must offer fl exible fl oor plans that allow buy-ers to assign specifi c purposes to their living space. Options for such features as prep kitchens and full multigeneration-al suites are essential. In some locations, buyers may prefer

elevations that are more traditional than contemporary. It may also mean that most or all of a builder’s fl oor plans are designed according to feng shui, the Chinese art and practice of creating harmonious surroundings, or vaastu shastra, a traditional Hindu system of architecture.

By Susan Bady, Senior Editor

Builders are introducing new fl oor

plans that respond to the needs of an

increasingly diverse population

52 Professional Builder March 2017

[DESIGN]

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