Vancouver Sun

KEEPING IT IN THE FAMILY

Rich multi-generation­al living is made possible through thoughtful home renovation­s

- AUDREY HOFFER The Washington Post

Behind the front door of a modest Cape Cod in Arlington, Va., seven lives are entwined.

Three generation­s comprising three families live together: two teenage girls, their parents and the girls’ three living grandparen­ts. The age span is 13 to 86.

The Smith family — Rusty Smith, his wife, Lisa Gibbs-Smith, and teenage daughters Audrey and Lauren — moved to Arlington in 2011. They bought the three-level Cape Cod with a main living floor, an upstairs and a basement. Smith and Gibbs- Smith had no intention of expanding the house until they began looking over their shoulders at their parents’ lives.

Rusty Smith’s mother had died, and his father, Frank Smith, 74, lived in Florida. “The stress of being alone was hard,” Frank Smith said.

“We asked him to come up and live with us,” said Rusty Smith, who is a bugler with the U.S. Army Old Guard Fife and Drum Corps. The house was big enough to accommodat­e him.

“My dad broached the idea of moving to an assisted-living facility,” said Gibbs-Smith, a pianist and director of worship arts at Clarendon United Methodist Church. Jim Gibbs, 79, and Grace Gibbs, 87, lived in Annandale, Virginia. She suffered from progressiv­e dementia.

“We had a family conversati­on and came up with the crazy idea of asking them to live with us, too. ‘ Why don’t we add on to our house and just keep putting people in it?’” she said.

The Smith house wasn’t big enough for seven, so they had to figure out how to expand, pay for it and manage day-in-and-day-out togetherne­ss.

“The dynamics of moving three independen­t households into one is complicate­d. The courage it took for everyone was huge,” GibbsSmith said.

Pew Research Center defines a multi-generation­al household as one with grandparen­ts and grandchild­ren or with two or more adult generation­s. The trend since 1980 is more people living in multigener­ational homes, and a higher number of multi-generation­al households, said D’Vera Cohn, a senior writer and editor at Pew.

In 2009, the last year of the Great Recession, 17 per cent of Americans lived in households that were multi-generation­al, Cohn said. This translates to 51.5 million people living in homes with either grandparen­ts and grandchild­ren, or with two or more adult generation­s. Pew ’s estimates are based on census data.

In 2016, the most recent Pew numbers, 20 per cent of Americans — 64 million people — lived in multi-generation­al homes. “This is a record number of people,” Cohn said.

“Our baby boomer population is getting older, and living together in one house is becoming more common,” said Bob Gallagher, president and co-owner of Sun Design in McLean and Burke, Virginia, an architectu­ral design and remodellin­g company with a focus on aging in place.

Kim Adams, director of marketing for the Brambleton Group, said she’s seeing an uptick in multigener­ational families. “Builders are adapting their home designs to create additional living spaces that offer privacy and separation for parents or college students moving back home, and ground floor suites for easy access for grandparen­ts,” she said.

Structural modificati­ons are the easiest to negotiate. “Getting rid of stairs or reducing their need with first-floor master suites, eliminatin­g raised transition­s between rooms and trip hazards in the shower, and putting up grab bars on bathroom walls are basic concerns when someone gets older,” Gallagher said.

There are also the financial and emotional aspects of uniting disparate families.

When the Smith family talked to a senior citizen adviser, he addressed Gibbs- Smith first: “‘How is your marriage?’ ” her father recalled. “Then he asked me: ‘How do you get along with your daughter? It’s important to have good relationsh­ips before you enter into something so monumental,’ the adviser told us.”

Once the Smith family made the decision for the grandparen­ts to move in, they had to work out the finances.

“Dad had the choice of taking the money from the sale of his Annandale house and putting it into a retirement community or into the addition of our house,” GibbsSmith said.

“We considered how much better Grace’s care would be, and mine, too, as I got older, if we lived together,” Gibbs said.

“Everyone cares when you live together as a family. You don’t just have people doing a job,” said Frank Smith, Rusty’s father.

The Gibbses sold their Annandale house and contribute­d the assets toward the $350,000 renovation of the Arlington house. “We kept our financial estate in the family instead of giving it to a commercial entity,” Gibbs said.

The family hired Sun Design to draft drawings of alternativ­e floor plans. “We showed them different layouts for using the space, keeping in mind each person’s desire for some privacy,” Gallagher said.

Gibbs-Smith said: “We released all the decisions about fixtures and doorknobs to the design team and said, ‘Just make it so the functions are harmonious.’”

The main level was expanded to include a bedroom, adjoining bathroom and sitting room for the elder Gibbses. The bathroom was designed as a mirror image of the one Grace Gibbs was accustomed to in their Annandale house. And the sitting room, named heritage room, was decorated with objects she also recognized.

Sun Design measured the size and shape of the Annandale living room and even the windows to perfectly replicate it, said John Byrd, a public relations practition­er who has worked with Sun Design for two decades. They used the same wall colour and the same style and colour of the trims around the room. The carpet, furnishing­s, wall photos and art from the previous house were positioned in the same spots to recreate the identical appearance and footprint.

Frank Smith moved into a corner bedroom near the house front.

A communal space encompassi­ng kitchen, dining room and living room — with space enough for a baby grand piano — became the home focal point.

“Our idea was that if you’re in the kitchen or dining or living rooms, don’t expect to be alone. If you want privacy you go to your own room,” Gibbs- Smith said.

“No one has a mini-fridge in their bedroom,” Rusty Smith said. The family eats together every night.

There are three bedrooms upstairs — a master and one each for the girls — plus a Jack-and-Jill bathroom and family room that doubles as an office and music practice room. Lauren plays the violin. Audrey plays the French horn.

Yet, no matter how good-natured everyone is, sacrifices are inevitable. The Smiths wanted a washer and dryer on the main living level for their parents’ easy access, but that required making the living space smaller. So laundry facilities went downstairs.

“Melding design, finance and emotion is an art, not a science,” Gallagher said.

Neverthele­ss, “if you’re creative, you’re willing and you have good relationsh­ips, you can make it happen,” Gibbs- Smith said.

“We’re average Joes and we did it.”

Audrey Smith, 15, said: “It’s not like some fairy tale where everyone is always happy and gets their way, but the benefits are better than the costs.”

The dynamics of moving three independen­t households into one is complicate­d. The courage it took … was huge.

 ?? PHOTOS: KATHERINE FREY/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Clockwise from left: Jim Gibbs, Lisa Gibbs-Smith, Lauren Smith, Frank Smith, Rusty Smith and Grace Gibbs enjoy nightly meals together.
PHOTOS: KATHERINE FREY/THE WASHINGTON POST Clockwise from left: Jim Gibbs, Lisa Gibbs-Smith, Lauren Smith, Frank Smith, Rusty Smith and Grace Gibbs enjoy nightly meals together.
 ??  ?? The kitchen has a large island with a granite countertop that opens onto the dining room.
The kitchen has a large island with a granite countertop that opens onto the dining room.

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