As populations continue to age globally, architecture is increasingly confronted with a difficult question: how can homes support physical accessibility without reducing later life to a purely clinical condition? Too often, housing designed for aging prioritizes utility at the expense of atmosphere, identity, and emotional comfort. The result is a built environment that functions efficiently yet rarely feels aspirational. With Home for Life in Heifort, Belgian practice FELT proposes another possibility entirely––one where aging is treated not as decline to be managed, but as a stage of life deserving of beauty, autonomy, and architectural richness.
Designed for a retired couple wishing to age in place, the 170-square-meter residence quietly embeds accessibility into an environment defined less by accommodation than by spatial generosity. From the street, the single-story house appears almost archetypal: a compact white volume capped by a copper-toned roof and punctuated by a circular window that lends the façade a near childlike familiarity. The restrained exterior, however, conceals an unexpectedly layered interior landscape where light, timber, rhythm, and procession become active participants in daily life.
FELT founders Jasper Stevens and Karel Verstraeten resisted approaching ageing as a fixed condition requiring static solutions. Instead, the project anticipates change over time. “You cannot fully predict future ageing or possible challenges related to mobility,” the studio explains, “so that flexibility has to be embedded in the architecture itself.”
That philosophy manifests in subtle yet critical decisions throughout the house: generous circulation widths, sliding doors, level thresholds, adaptable kitchen components, and accessible sanitary spaces all work quietly in the background to sustain independence for as long as possible.
Importantly, none of these interventions announce themselves through overtly medicalized aesthetics. Instead, the house feels warm, tactile, and deeply domestic. Exposed CLT timber frames establish a visible rhythm across the interior, creating a sequence of alternating “served” and “service” spaces––a classical organizational principle reinterpreted for contemporary life. Larger open rooms unfold into more compact support spaces, creating a legible plan that can evolve alongside the occupants’ future needs.
“Alternating larger open rooms with servant spaces creates a plan that remains flexible over time,” the architects note. “It also allows the thresholds between spaces to become more open or more closed in the future, depending on changing needs.”
The timber itself plays an equally important psychological role. While accessibility standards often lead to sterile environments, FELT instead leans into material softness and familiarity. “You do not want an environment that feels like a device or an aid,” the studio says, “but a home that conveys calm, familiarity, and ease.” Throughout the interior, pale wood surfaces absorb and diffuse daylight, producing spaces that feel simultaneously intimate and expansive. White-painted sections heighten the contrast between structure and openness, balancing warmth with luminosity.
Perhaps the project’s most distinctive architectural gesture arrives overhead. Rising above the roofline are three sculptural chimney-like volumes clad in weathering copper. While they formally animate the otherwise modest silhouette, they also serve crucial environmental and experiential functions. Housing technical and servant spaces, the vertical elements draw daylight deep into the narrow plan from multiple orientations. Rather than acting as isolated skylights, these shafts become luminous spatial volumes in themselves.
The changing quality of light throughout the day becomes a subtle mechanism for perceiving time within the home. “The house feels different throughout the day,” FELT explains. “The passage of the day becomes almost tangible within the house.” In a project centered on ageing, this sensitivity to temporality feels especially poignant. Architecture here does not attempt to resist time, instead framing it gently and perceptibly through the atmosphere.
That emotional attentiveness extends to intergenerational living as well. Tucked within the roof volume sits a compact sleeping loft designed for visiting grandchildren. Accessible now via a pale blue spiral stair, the space introduces continuity and joy into a home otherwise organized around long-term care considerations. If the stair eventually becomes impractical, the loft can transition into storage without compromising the functionality of the main floor. The gesture reflects FELT’s broader refusal to reduce ageing to limitation alone.
What ultimately distinguishes Home for Life is its rejection of the assumption that accessibility necessitates neutrality. “We hope projects like this show that the opposite is possible,” the architects explain. “A house designed around aging can still have a clear identity, its own spatial qualities, and a distinct architectural voice.”
To see this and other works by the architecture and design studio, visit felt.works.
Photography by Stijn Bollaert.









