The Silent Struggle in the Sitting Room
Let’s picture a familiar Sunday afternoon in a lovely home in Ngong or anywhere in Kenya. The family is gathered, the television is on. Grandma slowly stands up from the sofa to go to the kitchen. Her hand reaches out, almost instinctively, to grip the back of an armchair for balance as she walks across the polished tiles. She avoids the low, plush rug in the center of the room. She pauses at the doorway, her eyes adjusting from the bright lounge to the darker corridor.
No one says anything. It’s just how things are. We might call it “getting older,” and simply remind her to “be careful.” But what if her home itself could be looking out for her? What if the design of the space could do some of the remembering for her?

For years, the conversation around aging and housing in Kenya has been stuck at one extreme: the family compound, or a retirement home. We’ve missed the vast, dignified middle ground. At Lanny Builders, our experience in crafting multi-generational homes has shown us a pressing need. It’s not just about adding a granny flat. It’s about weaving respect, safety, and independence into the very fabric of the main house. This is Cognitive Design: creating environments that support changing minds and bodies without shouting “old age.”
Beyond Ramps: Designing for the Senses
Cognitive design starts with empathy, not just compliance. It understands that fading eyesight, slower mobility, and memory that plays tricks are not failures, but natural changes. A home can be a gentle guide.
- The Unforgiving Shine of Modern Floors: Those beautiful, glossy porcelain tiles are a slipping hazard when wet, and can create a blinding glare from sunlight or overhead lights. Our solution is to specify matt-finish, textured tiles with high grip, even when wet. We use consistent flooring throughout living areas to avoid tripping over sudden changes in level. That elegant Turkish rug? We secure it firmly with non-slip padding or opt for flush-mounted carpets.
- The Mystery of the Dark Corridor: Why are Kenyan hallways often so dark? For aging eyes that struggle with contrast, a shadowy passage to the bathroom at night is a real danger zone. We design with layered, automatic lighting. Motion-sensor LED strips that gently illuminate along skirting boards provide a safe, low-level path of light at night without being harsh. We ensure light switches are oversized and placed at consistent heights, not hidden behind doors.
- The Colour That Guides: A purely beige-and-white house can be a confusing landscape. We strategically use colour as a navigation tool. Painting the bathroom door a soft, contrasting colour from the bedroom wall makes it easy to find. Using a darker worktop on a light kitchen cabinet creates a clear visual boundary, making it easier to see edges and avoid bumps.

The Thoughtful Details That Speak Volumes
True professionalism is in the details a family might never explicitly ask for, but will come to rely on.
- The “No-Struggle” Bathroom: We replace traditional shower trays with level-access, walk-in showers that eliminate the need to step over a high lip. Grab bars are integrated elegantly into the wall tiling from the start—they look like part of the design, not a hospital afterthought. We install thermostatic mixer taps to prevent accidental scalding.
- The Kitchen That Remembers: Deep, dark base cabinets are hard to search. We install full-extension, soft-close drawers that bring contents into the light. Lever-style taps are easier for stiff hands than small knobs. We lower the height of a key section of countertop to allow for preparation while seated.
- The Calm of Familiarity: Cognitive decline can bring anxiety. A simple, clear floor plan where the bedroom, bathroom, and sitting room are in a close, logical loop fosters independence. We create a quiet, sun-filled nook by a window with a familiar chair—a personal anchor point in the home.

Building a Legacy of Care
This approach isn’t about building a “special needs” home. It’s about building a smart, adaptable, and graceful home that will care for every member of the family through every stage of life. It’s a home where grandchildren can run freely, and grandparents can move with confidence. It future-proofs your largest investment.

We believe a home should not just house your family; it should hold them, support them, and empower them. Designing with cognitive awareness is one of the deepest expressions of that belief. It transforms a house from a structure into a silent, steadfast guardian, allowing Baba and Mama to maintain their dignity and place at the heart of the family for years to come.
Ready to build a home that cares for every generation? Talk to us about weaving cognitive design principles into your family’s future.
Lanny Builders Limited. Building with Insight, Building for Life.
