Jennifer Molinsky
Jennifer Molinsky is Director of the Housing an Aging Society Program at the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies and a Lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. As Director, Dr. Molinsky leads research exploring the housing challenges facing an aging population, including affordability, accessibility and safety in the home, community livability, and connections between housing, services, and health. She was lead author on the Center’s major reports on the challenges of housing an aging society, including Housing America's Older Adults 2023; Advancing Housing and Health Equity for Older Adults: Pandemic Innovations and Policy Ideas, The State of the Nation’s Housing for Older Adults 2018 and 2019; Older Households 2015–2035: Projections and Implications for Housing a Growing Population (2016); and Housing America’s Older Adults: Meeting the Needs of an Aging Population (2014), and has also written about the role of housing in wellbeing in older age. Jennifer was also a co-editor of the 2018 book A Shared Future: Fostering Communities of Inclusion in an Era of Inequality and the 2014 book Homeownership Built to Last: Balancing Access, Affordability, and Risk After the Housing Crisis.
Jennifer is a member of the Advisory Board of the Milken Institute Center for the Future of Aging and the Board of Directors of both Hearth, Inc and 2Life Communities. She also serves on the steering committee for The Chan School of Public Health Initiative on Health and Homelessness at Harvard and co-directs the Healthy Places Design Lab at the Graduate School of Design. Prior to joining the Center, she was Chief Planner for Long Range Planning in Newton, MA, and held positions with the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, Municipal Art Society of New York, Abt Associates, and PricewaterhouseCoopers’ government housing finance practice.
Jennifer holds a PhD in Urban Planning from MIT, a Masters of Public Affairs–Urban and Regional Planning from the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs (formerly the Woodrow Wilson School), and a BA from Yale.
By This Author
Bipartisan Policy Center Task Force Recommends Integrating Health and Housing to Support Aging in Place
The Future of Renting Among Older Adults
Homeownership and Affordable Housing a Key Part of Upward Mobility, but Hard to Come By
VIDEO: An Interactive Conversation about the Role of Designers in Promoting Racial Justice in our Communities
Challenges Ahead in Housing America’s Very Low-Income Older Adults
Homeownership Among Older Adults: A Source of Stability—or Stress?
Measuring the Built Environment for Aging in Place: A Review of Neighborhood Audit Tools
The Association Between High Mortgage Debt and Financial Well-Being in Old Age: Implications for the Financial Education Field
Accessibility Features for Older Households in Subsidized Housing
What Can Be Done To Better Support Older Adults To Age Successfully In Their Homes And Communities?
Estimating the Gap in Affordable and Available Rental Units for Families
A Shared Future: Fostering Communities of Inclusion in an Era of Inequality
Homeownership Built to Last: Balancing Access, Affordability, and Risk after the Housing Crisis
Naturally Occurring Retirement Communities Score Lower on Livability
Ten Insights About Older Households from the 2020 State of the Nation’s Housing Report
The Geography of Livability: Insights from AARP’s Livability Index
For Older Adults in Publicly Funded Housing During the Pandemic, Service Coordinators Help Build Resilience
New Report Finds Most Older Adults Do Not Reside in Livable Communities