Predicting an American Future for Cohousing

Cohousing is an innovative form of accommodation. It offers economic, environmental and social advantages over existing forms of development. Cohousing emerged in the USA during the past 20 years as an innovative housing form with a niche market, but adoptions to date have been limited. This paper seeks to determine the future for cohousing in the USA, using innovation diffusion theories. It reviews the factors influencing the rate of diffusion of cohousing (relative advantages, compatibility, complexity, trialability and observability). It investigates the impact of path dependencies and the existence of disruptive technologies on adoptions. It considers the potential for cohousing to "cross the chasm" and be adopted by the mainstream. The findings of the research suggest that "grass-roots" approaches to the creation of cohousing communities are likely to result in the greatest number of adoptions in the future.

Context and quantification

About the policy

Area

Social Rights

Instrument

Policy support

Intervention

Cohousing

Cost

None

Funding

None

Institutional arrangement

None

Impacts

Stakeholders involved

Community organizations

Stakeholders impacted

Households, Local planners

Wellbeing

Community

Justice consideration

Recognitional

Metadata

Lead author nameJo Williams
Lead author genderFemale
Lead author institutionUniversity College London
Lead author institution locationLondon, UK
Peer reviewed?true
Grey literature?false
Type of paperResearch article
Volume40
Publication year2008
URL / DOIdoi:10.1016/j.futures.2007.08.022
Sufficiency mentioned?false