Center for Architecture and Building Science Research at NJIT Health Care & Aging Environments

Staff Biographies

Health Care and Aging Environments

Richard Olsen, Ph.D.
Director

B. Lynn Hutchings
Research Architect

Mission »

Staff Bios »

Research »

Publications/Resources »

Contact »
hutchings@njit.edu

Website »
ahouseforallchildren.njit.edu

 

 

 

Richard Olsen, Ph.D.
Director, Health Care and Aging Environments Research

Richard Olsen, Ph.D. is an environmental psychologist specializing in design research and evaluation of facilities for people with physical, cognitive and emotional disabilities. Dr. Olsen was the principal investigator on five research grants funded by the New Jersey Developmental Disabilities Council-Rutgers University Research Consortium. These studies focused on a wide range of topics including consumers’ evaluations of the physical and social environment of their community based residences, their reactions to community living after institutional life, aging with a disability in the community, and the concerns of older parents caring for an adult child with a disability.

Dr. Olsen was also the principal investigator on several research grants that analyzed the impact of the physical environment on people with Alzheimer’s Disease and related dementias and their caregivers. He was the senior author of Homes That Help, a research-based publication that offers guidelines for creating a safe and supportive caregiving home through design modifications, assistive technology and behavioral management strategies.

Currently, Dr. Olsen and his colleagues are investigating the ability of easy-to-access nostalgic music and videos to engage people with dementia and to stimulate positive behavior. He is also the principal investigator on a grant to develop a research-based manual for parents raising a child with physical disabilities. The manual will provide practical advice for modifying the home to meet the changing needs of the child and the family. This project is funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Dr. Olsen is a member of the Gerontological Society of America, The American Society on Aging and he is a member of the Advisory Council for the New Jersey Technology Assistive Resource Program. He has published and lectured extensively on the impact of the physical setting on people with special needs. Dr. Olsen is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Catholic University. He received his Ph.D. in Environmental Psychology from the Graduate Center of City University of New York.

Return to Top of Page

B. Lynn Hutchings, M.Arch.
Research Architect, Health Care and Aging Environments

Lynn Hutchings, M. Arch., and PhD candidate in Policy and Social Work at Rutgers University. s. Hutchings' research interests include analyzing the social and environmental needs of people with dementia, age-related illnesses, and people with developmental disabilities. Together with Richard Olsen, Ph.D., Ms. Hutchings has completed numerous studies of the environmental issues affect people with special needs and their caregivers. Studies investigate the impact of both the physical and social environment on populations with specific disabilities and their caregivers and explore caregivers’ strategies for creating a safe and supportive home. The information dotained from one study was used to create a manual for Alzheimer’s caregivers: Homes That Help: Advice from Caregivers for Creating a Supportive Home. Planning a Supportive Home Environment for Children with Disabilities. Another study, exploring the home environments of children with physical disabilities resulted in a book and video, A House for All Children. Ms. Hutchings also been the project manager for a series of studies evaluating the environmental needs of people with both physical and cognitive disabilities, including cerebral palsy, spina bifida, brain and spinal cord injuries, and mental retardation. Ms. Hutchings' research has also included studies that explore the impact of media (music and video) interventions on Alzheimer’s patients in an adult daycare setting, two studies on the deinstitutionalization of adults with developmental disabilities, and future care settings of adults with developmental disabilities who now live with and are cared for by parents or siblings aged 55 and older.

Ms. Hutchings holds a B.F.A. from Beaver College, an M.F.A. from Rutgers University, and an M.Arch from NJIT.

Return to Top of Page

"Generating new knowledge to improve the built environment and enhance quality of life"


Click Here for the CABSR Site Directory

ˆback to top