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Itβs a brilliant concept.
A new smart home for those with disabilities opened on Long Island and has quickly become a βgame changerβ for the everyday lives of its residents.
βIf it wasnβt for this house, I wouldnβt be as independent as I am now,β 33-year-old AJ Duran, who recently moved into the Shirley property in Suffolk County, told The Post.
The four-bedroom property, which is operated by the locally operated organization Free, aka Family Residences and Essential Enterprises, has been decked out with high-tech appliances and voice-controlled utilities for residents to make the most of rather than calling for the homeβs aids to handle minuscule tasks.
Its sink, refrigerator, stove tops, oven, and blinds are all Bluetooth-controlled and can be remotely turned on and off for residents from different communities across LI.
The oven door opens sideways rather than top to bottom, making it possible for wheelchair users to cook in it, while the sink and stove top are vertically adjustable at the simple touch of a button.
βPeople who perhaps could benefit the most from modern technology often have the least access to it,β Freeβs CEO Robert Budd said of the thousands kicked into making the April opened house electronically sophisticated.
He added that homes like this, especially on Long Island, are few and far between β and that the facilityβs success is moving Free toward opening more. The houseβs upgrades were funded through Medicaid, and its sink, stove, blinds, and oven were the priciest features at several thousand dollars combined.
Other features, like the linking of Amazon Alexa devices, individual climate controls for each room, and likewise smart devices, were comparatively cost-efficient, Budd added.
βThis home was our commitment to making sure that these people could have greater autonomyβ¦that kind of independence leads to greater emotional well-being, and greater emotional well-being leads to greater overall health.β
Duran, who has cerebral palsy and relies on a wheelchair for mobility, is making the most of the easy-to-use gadgets inside her homeβs new kitchen.
βItβs opened so many doors and things for me that I couldnβt be able to do before. Now I can access the kitchen, I can make a sandwich on my own,β Duran said.
Using an Alexa device to learn recipes at a work station in the kitchen, Duran is now discovering for the first time that she has a culinary passion. Sheβs been cooking up a storm with dinners like pasta and meat sauce, turkey in a smart airfryer, and taco nights for her roommates.
βIβm loving my independence and not having to ask people to do me a meal,β she said.
βThis new house and everything in it is really the best thing Free has ever done for people like me.β
Alyssa Slade, who is moving in on Wednesday, is most looking forward to the easy access multimedia aspect of the home, which has Amazon Alexa devices in each room.
βEverything in here is so beautiful,β the 32-year-old with autism said while touring her new residence on Monday. βI love music, I love music videos, and I like TV showsβ¦thatβs the most exciting part for me.β
The homeβs onsite supervisor, Deborah Brock, said that innovative equipment is already changing the demeanor of the two residents who Slade and one other will join in the coming weeks.
βItβs really exciting, especially for AJβ¦she comes and goes when she wants, eats when she wants, and has access to everything for herself,β Brock said.
βItβs encouraging these people to do more for themselves than depend on others for assistance. Itβs definitely a switch, definitely a game changer.β