How Stroke and Disability Affect Living Quarters Design
After a stroke or with a long-term disability, the home becomes both the rehabilitation space and the everyday living space. Doors that opened fine before are suddenly too narrow; carpets become trip hazards; switches that used to be reached standing now have to be reached from a wheelchair. This guide is a contractor's view of how living quarters should be redesigned to support a stroke or disabled user, in coordination with the user's clinical team. We do not promise medical outcomes; we focus on access, transfer, caregiver workflow and safety.
Start with the routes
Map the daily routes inside the home before changing any fixture:
- Bedroom to bathroom.
- Bedroom to living area to dining table.
- Main door to lift / car / outdoor route.
- Kitchen access for a self-feeding user.
Each route is walked (or rolled) with the user and the caregiver. We measure clear widths at the narrowest point, note every threshold, and identify the door swings that conflict with a wheelchair or walker.
Turning and clear floor space
A standard manual wheelchair needs about 1500 mm of clear floor space to turn 180°. An electric wheelchair needs 1500–2000 mm; a motorised scooter needs 2200–2500 mm. We confirm the actual aid in use, then we plan the bedroom and bathroom around those numbers. Where the room is too small for a 180° turn, we plan the layout for a 90° approach and a 90° exit — the user enters and leaves on the same side of the bed or chair.
Doors and door swings
- Clear door opening 850 mm or wider as a starting target. Below 800 mm, a wheelchair will scrape; below 750 mm it will not pass.
- Sliding or barn doors on bathrooms and bedrooms where a swinging door eats into the clear floor space the user needs.
- Lever handles, both sides. A user with one strong arm cannot turn a round knob.
- Removable swing-clear hinges let an existing door open the extra 30–40 mm that often makes the difference at a 750 mm doorway.
Bed transfer
This is the single most common transfer in a stroke or disability home. We plan for:
- The bed at wheelchair seat height, so the user slides across rather than steps down.
- Clear floor space of at least 1200 × 1500 mm on the stronger-side of the bed for the wheelchair to pull alongside.
- A bed grab pole or a bed rail with a transfer handle, fixed to the bed frame, used to support the standing-or-pivoting moment of the transfer.
- A ceiling track hoist where the user cannot weight-bear at all. The track runs from over the bed to over the wheelchair park or the bathroom doorway.
- A slide board kept by the bed for caregiver-assisted lateral transfers.
Bedroom and living-area layout
- Single-level floors. Remove small ridges between rooms; recess door tracks; level off carpet-to-tile transitions.
- No loose mats or rugs. They catch wheelchair casters and walking-aid tips.
- Furniture spacing. A clear 900 mm aisle between sofa and coffee table; a clear 1200 mm aisle through to the bedroom.
- Bedside table at wheelchair height with reachable items only — water, phone, call button, light switch.
Reachable controls and switches
From the seated wheelchair position, a user can typically reach 400–1200 mm above floor for forward reach. We work to those limits:
- Light switches at around 900–1000 mm above the floor, near the door on the user's stronger side.
- Socket outlets at 450–1200 mm above floor — never at floor level where the user cannot reach to plug in.
- Air-con and TV remotes in a fixed reachable spot; lanyard or magnetic mount so they do not slide out of reach.
- Curtain controls — wand or motorised, not cords that have to be pulled in a hand-over-hand motion.
Flooring, lighting and contrast
- Slip-resistant floors across the wet areas and at the main door where damp shoes come in.
- Even lighting with no dark corners; warm 3000 K tones in living areas, brighter neutral in the bathroom and kitchen.
- Contrast at transitions — a darker strip at the edge of a step or a level change is more useful than a colour-matched threshold, especially for a user with hemianopia or low vision after stroke.
Bathroom and toilet for a stroke user
- Grab bars positioned for the user's stronger side. Hemiparesis means a left-side grab bar and a right-side grab bar are not interchangeable.
- A shower seat with an arm rest on the stronger side, so the user can push to stand.
- A handheld shower with a long hose, controllable one-handed.
- A bidet spray or warm-water cleansing beside the WC for users who cannot easily reach to clean.
- An emergency call point reachable from the floor.
Caregiver workflow
A home designed for a disabled user is also a workplace for the caregiver. We check:
- The caregiver has room to stand on the user's transfer side.
- Equipment (commode chair, wheelchair, walker, hoist sling) has a defined storage place that is not in the way of the route.
- Linens, gloves and basic medical supplies are stored at caregiver-reach height, not user-reach height where they might be disturbed.
- The caregiver can see and hear the user from at least one work spot — kitchen or living room — through a sightline, a baby monitor or a discreet camera that the user has consented to.
Coordination with the care team
Where the user is being discharged from hospital, or is under a community rehabilitation team, the modifications should match what the therapists are training. The user's occupational therapist often has specific recommendations on grab bar placement, transfer technique and assistive devices. We sequence the work so the home is ready by the discharge date.
Related services
- Home accessibility modification
- Mobility aids
- Caregiver-friendly home planning
- Types of WCs and toilet aids for stroke patients
References
- BCA Code on Accessibility in the Built Environment 2019 — Chapter 4 (Doors, Manoeuvring Space), Chapter 5 (Sanitary Provision, Wheelchair Transfer), Chapter 7 (Residential Development, Switches and Socket Outlets), Appendix B (Older Persons).
- LifeSG senior care services guide — context for home, centre and stay-in care options in Singapore.
- Agency for Integrated Care care services — community care services and rehabilitation support at home.