### Problem >Old people need old people, but they also need the young, and young people need contact with the old. ### Solution >Create dwellings for some 50 old people in every neighborhood. Place these dwellings in three rings… > >1. A central core with cooking and nursing provided. >2. Cottages near the core. >3. Cottages further out from the core, mixed among the other houses of the neighborhood, but never more than 200 yards from the core. > >…in such a way that the 50 houses together form a single coherent swarm, with its own clear center, but interlocked at its periphery with other ordinary houses of the neighborhood. ### Related Patterns ... when neighborhoods are properly formed they give the people there a cross section of ages and stages of development - [[Identifiable Neighborhood (14)]], [[Life Cycle (26)]], [[Household Mix (35)]]; however, the old people are so often forgotten and left alone in modern society, that it is necessary to formulate a special pattern which underlines their needs. Treat the core like any group house; make sure all the cottages, both those close to and those further away, small - [[Old Age Cottage (155)]], some of them perhaps connected to the larger family houses in the neighborhoods - [[The Family (75)]]; provide every second or third core with proper nursing facilities; somewhere in the orbit of the old age pocket, provide the kind of work which old people can manage best - especially teaching and looking after tiny children - [[Network of Learning (18)]], [[Children's Home (86)]], [[Settled Work (156)]], [[Vegetable Garden (177)]] ... --- > [!cite]- Alexander, Christopher. _A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction_. Oxford University Press, 1977, p. 215. > #APL/confidence/high > > #APL/Town-Patterns/Housing-Clusters