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Anixter Village, first-of-its-kind
residence in Illinois for people with spina bifida, to break
ground March 28
15-unit apartment building
offers accessible, affordable housing that enables independent
living
| FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE |
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| Contact: |
Betsy Storm, Director of Public
Relations, bstorm@anixter.org Aricka Flowers, Public Relations Specialist,
aflowers@anixter.org |
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| Phone: |
(773) 973-7900, Ext. 243 or 228 |
CHICAGO, IL (March
28, 2006) – The groundbreaking of Anixter Village, a
pioneering apartment building designed to enable independent
living for people with spina bifida and similar disabilities, will
take place at 10 a.m. on March 28, 2006. A 15-unit building
located at 2059 W. Washburne Avenue in Chicago’s Illinois Medical
District, Anixter Village will make the dream of independent
living a reality for people with spina bifida and similar
disabilities. The residence is expected to open in spring of 2007.
Mayor Richard M. Daley will speak at the groundbreaking.
Courtney Daly is a vivacious 17-year-old with spina bifida. She’s
a junior at Marist High School on Chicago’s Southwest Side. Like
most teens, she anticipates the day — in the near future — when
she’ll live in her own apartment. When Courtney learned of Anixter
Village, she was thrilled to discover that a place like it will
soon exist as a living option for her, an apartment designed with
the ultimate in wheelchair accessibility.
Courtney jokes, “My mom and I have been pretty much joined at the
hip my entire life. Making the transition from living with my
family to having an apartment will be challenging, so anything
that would make it easier — like complete accessibility in an
apartment — would be a great help.”
Spina bifida is a condition that occurs in nearly 10 of every
10,000 births in the United States. Spina bifida means cleft
spine, which is an incomplete closure in the spinal column. It is
a birth anomaly that occurs in the developing fetus when a part of
the spinal column fails to close and drop below the surface of the
skin. The condition occurs at various levels of severity from mild
to severe, depending on the level at which the spinal column is
involved. Individuals with spina bifida and similar disabilities
can live independently with personal and environmental supports.
Most use wheelchairs or crutches to aid mobility.
Anixter Village features “universal
design,” simply defined as design that provides as much
accessibility as possible to as many people as possible, without
the need for additional adaptation or specialized design. It’s
particularly essential for people in wheelchairs. According to the
Center
for Universal Design at North Carolina State University, building
universal design features into a
home adds only 2 to 5 percent to the cost. These features may
include oversized bathrooms, door handles that open with
easy-to-use levers rather than doorknobs, and easily accessible
storage space. The architectural firm that designed Anixter
Village is Lisec & Biederman, Ltd. of Chicago.
Many young adults with spina bifida have lived at home longer than
the typical young adult. Residents of Anixter Village will be
offered an array of tailor-made support services to assist them in
the transition to living on their own. Among the possible skills
they may hone will be cooking, grocery shopping, navigating urban
transportation and employment–development skills.
Anixter Village is a unique entity in Illinois, one that neither
of the two organizations responsible for it could have created
alone. Six years ago, the two nonprofits were introduced by a
mutual acquaintance. The vision for Anixter Village came from
David G. McLone, M.D., PhD. and president and CEO of The Village
Foundation. For more than 25 years, McLone led the division of
Neurosurgery at Children’s Memorial Hospital. He created the Spina
Bifida Clinic at Children’s Memorial in 1975, building it into a
premier center of its kind in the world. McLone is recognized as
one of the foremost international experts in pediatric
neurosurgery and neural tube defects.
The Village Foundation, founded in 2001, is committed to enhancing
the quality of life for young adults with chronic neurological
disabilities by providing opportunities and habilitation services
that foster independence. A primary goal of The Village Foundation
is to promote independence through camping experiences. McLone has
been a leader in facilitating camping experiences for children
with spina bifida over the past 15 years. When it came time to
developing housing for young adults with spina bifida, says McLone,
“Anixter Center was the natural partner for us. We have similar
objectives and philosophies.”
Anixter Center, founded nearly 90 years ago, is a nonprofit with
the mission of assisting people with disabilities to live and work
successfully in the community. With more than 20 residences among
its 70 programs and offerings, Anixter Center is known as an
innovator with broad expertise in housing. Anixter Center
President and CEO Allan I. Bergman is a nationally recognized
leader and expert on disability rights, services and advocacy.
“Our vision for Anixter Village is two-fold,” says Bergman.
“First, it’s essential to ensure that people with spina bifida and
similar disabilities have a place of their own to call ‘home’ that
is affordable, accessible and enhances their sense of freedom and
well-being. And second, we’re spreading the important message that
there’s a large and rapidly growing need for accessible,
affordable housing that incorporates universal design — not only
for people with disabilities as those individuals are usually
defined, but also for the increasing number of aging baby
boomers.”
A variety of sources provided financial support for Anixter
Village, including: the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development, the City of Chicago, The Illinois Housing Development
Authority, the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago, Anixter Center,
The Camp Ability Foundation and The Village Foundation.
Anixter Center Groundbreaking -
Backgrounder Click here
for the Image Gallery
of Anixter Village
• • • • • • • • • • •
The mission of the Lester and
Rosalie Anixter Center is to assist people with disabilities to
live and work successfully in the community. Anixter Center is a
leading provider of high-quality vocational, residential and
educational options, substance abuse prevention and treatment, and
health care. More than 5,000 individuals a year are served through
70 programs at 35 locations throughout the Chicago area.
Note to reporters and editors: for
more information about Anixter Center, please visit our media room
at
http://www.anixter.org/mediaroom/index.htm.
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