To develop confidence in one's own abilities and competences, a stepping stone to independence, finding one's own way, ...

To experience community, be able to withdraw, enjoy leisure amenities, have fun, design one's environment in an individual manner, ...

 

 




  


What we aim to achieve…

The Sheltered Housing facility serves the development and enhancement of abilities that make unaided living possible. Jointly with the juvenile/adult, guidelines are set up, the goal of which are the largest possible degree of independence and self-determination. Working objectives are the social integration and occupational assimilation of the handicapped juvenile/adult. 
 

For whom? 

Juveniles/adults of either sex, having completed their general compulsory education and having a day occupation (training, work therapy, etc.) 
 
 

Our competence

The Sheltered Housing facility consists of two housing groups featuring eight single rooms each, all of them adapted for wheel chairs. The types are: 

Besides, we support residents within the framework of our socio-pedagogical service (Work-housing-aftercare) when changing housing services and/or changing jobs (in contacting suitable training centres, with job interviews, finding an attachment figure or putting together an organizational plan: 
counselling care, daily schedule. 

Help and assistance are offered by us in such fields as practical-life experience (housekeeping, handling money, bodily care, calls with authorities), leisure activities and the social and emotional areas (problems at the workplace, relationships, etc.) 

 

 


 



 
 
 

Full-time attended housing

serves as preparation for a more independent form of housing. Jointly with the juvenile/adult, guidelines are set up the goal of which are the largest degree of independence and self-dependence. 
 
 

Part-time attended housing

This type is meant for disabled people coming from full-time attended housing. This means that they are already familiar with the facility, that they have in part acquired job experience and already gained a measure of independence requiring only limited care. 
 
 

Assisted housing for the physically handicapped

This form of an apartment caters especially to people whose abilities allow them to live largely independently, but who, due to their handicap, are still dependent on daily help with certain activities.