# Aging in Single-Room Occupancy Hotels: Using Photovoice to Co-Create Knowledge With Older Adults

**Authors:** Jarmin Yeh, Kattia Suarez Vargas, Howard Thornton, Susi Stadler

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1062 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how older adults in San Francisco's SRO hotels experience aging in place, using photovoice to co-create knowledge and empower residents.

## Contribution

The novel use of photovoice and participatory methods with marginalized older adults to co-create solutions for aging in place in SROs.

## Key findings

- Residents highlighted the complex interplay of ageism and racism across socioecological levels.
- Photovoice revealed both resistance and vulnerabilities among older SRO residents.
- The project fostered community empowerment and civic engagement through resident-centered approaches.

## Abstract

Single-room occupancy hotels (SROs) in San Francisco’s Tenderloin provide crucial affordable housing for low-income, formerly unhoused, and marginalized populations. As residents age, these buildings are transforming into naturally occurring retirement communities, posing complex challenges for aging in place. Despite their important role, SROs frequently have neglected maintenance, deteriorating conditions, and safety concerns, and are often located in neighborhoods with higher rates of noise, crime, and substance use. While research has explored characteristics of older SRO residents, their experiences of aging in place remain understudied. This qualitative project used participatory methods to amplify the contributions of SRO residents. We formed an Advisory Council of SRO residents with lived expertise and established a partnership with two community stakeholders: a nonprofit specializing in home adaptations and a senior center. Through human-centered design activities and culturally responsive bilingual facilitation, the Advisory Council examined intersecting impacts of ageism and racism across socioecological levels, leading to a co-created action plan for future collaborative projects. Our subsequent photovoice study engaged twelve diverse participants in documenting their environments with cameras, producing rich visual and narrative data that highlighted the multifaceted social, spatial, cultural, and temporal dynamics of daily life in and around SROs. This approach revealed both resistance and vulnerabilities among residents while assessing systems of oppression from internalized to structural levels. By prioritizing the perspectives of marginalized older adults, this project fostered community empowerment and enhanced capacity for civic engagement. Findings offer insights for co-developing resident-centered approaches to support aging in place within these vital housing communities.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762945