Situating Place and Wellbeing Within Heritage Interactions for Older Adults
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Selection of Methodology
2.2. Sampling
2.3. Participants
2.4. Interview Approach
- What is your experience of working with older adults?
- How do the needs of older adults differ to the needs of younger people?
- How do you believe heritage and historic places can support well-being?
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Ethical Approval
3. Results
- Barriers to engagement with the historic environment;
- Positive well-being implications of engaging with the historic environment;
- Need for a wider knowledge base on aging, well-being and the local historic environment.
3.1. Barriers to Engagement
3.1.1. Physiological Barriers
‘[Older people]…appear to have more needs around managing long term conditions and particularly sort of the complexity of multiple long term conditions…’.(Social prescribing professional)
‘One big thing is access… challenging on so many levels. So first of all physical because for heritage sites obviously so many of them [are] not only not wheelchair friendly, but it could be in the middle of nowhere. And so then you have transport issues…’(Heritage professional, Historic England)
‘There is an increasing chance that things like hearing and eyesight will deteriorate’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘So I give people a shopping list based on what would be in a working class low income home, of basics like milk and biscuits and tea. And you know, possibly some chocolate or some bread and stuff like that…The heritage attraction around what is in their home, so that they can touch and smell and taste along’.(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘…five sessions that we would deliver online, each of which would look at a different room at the castle’.(Learning Officer 1, Historic Environment Scotland)
‘…we had activities [where we sent out activity packs, so they had fidget blankets, things they could make, and a bit of baking and things like that’.(Learning Officer 2, Historic Environment Scotland)
‘…it was just really lovely being on site where we were in the visitor center. But we could look out at the Abbey and you’re effectively using heritage again as not so much the vehicle but as the context [with dementia sufferers]’.(Learning Officer 1, Historic Environment Scotland)
3.1.2. Psychological Barriers
‘Strangely enough, the social attitude side is one of the major barriers… because it’s been ingrained in [older adults]… I’ll go back to that statement. “It’s not for the likes of us”. You know what I mean? It’s been ingrained in them over generations… you go through school, elementary education and straight into a factory or whatever. And that’s your life. You might be able to go to the pub now and again or a social club…’.(Photovoice Facilitator)
‘We are told that heritage is the pinnacle of culture. We are told that it’s something that we should like and it’s for me…I think the biggest challenge for me, particularly with a palace, is finding relevancy if I live in a council house… So I think that’s the biggest challenge for me, making these spaces real’.(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘And when I said, yeah we’re gonna have an exhibition at the end, one of them said “what’s an exhibition?” Which breaks my heart. You know what I mean’?(Photovoice Facilitator)
‘…If you are unable, if you are unwilling, if you lack trust, if you can’t see yourself represented in these collections, why would you go in the first place’?(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘They [historic places] are presumed to be friendly and or a primary target audience for elders, which I think is condescending and misleading. Deeply condescending and misleading…’(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘One of the huge ironies I would suggest of heritage, though, is that these spaces are intensely manipulative in terms of our emotion, our time. They’re heavily curated, they contain artworks and collections which are purposefully designed by intent to make us elicit emotion. Yet going to these spaces, we are expected to be quiet and well behaved and rational in terms of how we express our emotion. I find that extraordinary, absolutely extraordinary, and one of the questions I ask elders, for example, is would you come to cry? Would you come to a museum to cry? Because it’s trying to make you cry’.(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘People don’t always understand how heritage can support their well-being… green spaces, nature, exercise, even the arts, is more accepted, but heritage is not yet recognized by all as being able to provide support’.(Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘I think there are challenges because if you present a piece of heritage, whether it’s a cultural asset from a museum or a building or a place, you’re always presenting it with a view to why that’s useful. And there are risks with that’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘Social prescribing is a sort of sensational headline, but I think that that can also plant a bit of mistrust amongst people. And then I think there’s a bit of myth busting that potentially needs to be done, which is, you know, no one is saying instead of receiving a clinical treatment that you medically require and are legally entitled to go to a singing club instead. Like, you know, it’s like, we’re not saying that… There’s a really understandable sort of concern amongst some people that what does this mean? I won’t be able to see my GP. Or does this mean that I won’t have access to other services or what? You know, what does that mean from my care? So I think again, the public narratives potentially in that myth busting can be a bit of a challenge also’.(Social Prescribing Professional)
‘So … we’re funding a project at the moment… which is working with older people and heritage as a route to enhancing their well-being. And that’s been designed to be very co-produced, bottom up, where the characteristics of the heritage are defined by the group. The group was not predetermined before the project started…’(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘I think with old people, unless it’s through an existing institution, it’s sometimes harder for people to find them. So you could go to a care home because it’s a place where people are collected together in the same way that school is and do an activity for that care home. In the same way that you might for a school. But outreach is not the same thing as addressing well-being inequality’.(Senior Heritage Professional Historic England)
‘So it’s about widening participation. It’s about addressing in inequalities. It’s about inclusion and diversity. All these issues are massive for our sector’.(Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘…it took longer than planned to develop these relationships, to develop these messages to get the right… content and format of this kind of a very light touch training because we don’t want to overwhelm people with a learning and information about history and heritage, because otherwise it starts to be off putting you know, but just enough for them to be able to see why it could work… and what are the benefits’.(Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘[Groups will] carry on just running and being, which is great, but not actually being part of the social prescribing offer because they don’t want to accommodate specific health and well-being needs that they don’t know how to handle. So I guess that then does become a barrier, which is if I, if I offer this up as a social prescribing thing to my sculptor class instead of getting some lovely middle class people that are quite happy to spend a Saturday morning messing about with clay or whatever, I’m going to end up with a variety of people that may have Parkinson’s or dementia or struggle to interact socially, or have other difficulties and challenges that I don’t know how to manage, and I think that’s a barrier to people connecting with social prescribing for older people. Is that kind of fear about managing’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘The barriers are much more about heritage organizations not knowing how to engage with social prescribing. So there’s a desire, there’s a kind of understanding of need. There’s a recognition of value. There’s a desire to do something. And I think the barriers tend to be, how do I make it work? What does this look like for us? How do I engage with the health system’?(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘When challenged to pinpoint what are the well-being benefits of people actually going to their sites, and to their organizations, and what is it that they’re going to get out of this in terms of supporting their health’?(Heritage Professional, Historic England)
3.1.3. Financial Barriers
‘…Sometimes they just see them as expensive, which is a financial barrier because there’s always tickets and charging and the heritage sites themselves struggle because it’s expensive to maintain them to offer free tickets or a kind of reduced cost of visit, etcetera’.(Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘…because [if] you’re struggling on a pension, your priority is not going to be going to be paying to get into a castle, you know’.(Photovoice Facilitator)
3.2. Positive Well-Being Implications of Engaging with the Historic Environment
- Using visits to historic places as a form of social prescribing;
- Developing memory and reminiscence-based activities for older adults with dementia;
- Running object handling sessions;
- Running heritage-based activity sessions (i.e., tapestry making, sewing);
- Utilizing online technology (i.e., Zoom) to engage with older adults who were not able to physically access sites, sharing historic knowledge and ‘finding connections’ between older adults and the historic places;
- Encouraging older adults to take photographs around their local historic environment;
- Encouraging older adults to visit, feel comfortable in, and feel a sense of belonging and ownership over their local area.
‘If your life is just a daily struggle every day… but if you can actually add a wee bit more enrichment and increase in confidence, you know, when I talk about the history and the culture … you’re telling people for the first time and you can see the pride well and open them’.(Photovoice Facilitator)
3.2.1. Communal Well-Being Benefits
‘You can still bring in a sandwich. You can still have a cup of tea. You can still occupy that space without being forced into commercialization, which I think is incredibly rare in our culture now. I think that’s there’s something quite beautiful about that as well. It’s also one of the few spaces I would suggest where it it’s considered ‘socially permissible’ to start conversations with strangers’.(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘…social engagement and connection… they are a crucial element’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘Oh, it was just a really nice atmosphere with folk chatting and sharing stuff…. Although the making [a tapestry] was the primary purpose, it kind of has the secondary benefit of being a really social activity and bringing folk together…’.(Learning Officer 1, Historic Environment Scotland)
‘…vehicle…for folk to get together or have a meaningful experience…you know I think folk value that more than anything else’.(Learning Officer 1, Historic Environment Scotland)
‘…it was always a nice environment in the learning space because we’d sit in there with cups of tea. That was always the thing. It’s got tea and biscuits, but then you can sit and chat. It’s very relaxed’.(Learning Officer 2, Historic Environment Scotland)
‘…In terms of loved ones, in terms of community memory, in terms of heritage, I don’t always think it’s about the site. I think it’s about community with people that are no longer with us…’(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘… Gathering together and social connection… was also a key element in the visiting [historic places]: that you go there with somebody… it’s a destination at which you meet’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘I think more outreach, getting into the communities and telling them, you know, this is as much for you as for someone that stays in Morningside. That’s a rich part of Edinburgh, you know’.(Photovoice Facilitator)
‘…I think reimagining these spaces as spaces of social care, with huge narratives of nature and togetherness and warmth, and reminding people that these elaborate stages of global history and constitutional action are people’s homes, where they slept and went to the toilet, and I think finding the domestic, finding the human. … I’m able to bring myself and find myself in these spaces’.(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘So the way I’ll connect is make connections with their own lives, such as you know, going to the garden. So do you have a garden at home or a park you like going to? As we have herb gardens and we talk about cooking, you know the herbs you might use in cooking and that we used in the past… It’s basically a home…’(Learning Officer 2, Historic Environment Scotland)
‘…she said “this has been the most amazing experience because I live locally and just meeting other people and feeling that the [local] castle is for me as well”. I think that’s the key thing is they feel they not only belong but they feel they can say it’s for them as well because some people… are kind of put off when they think of going into an art gallery or a museum or a heritage site. It’s kind of like well I don’t know much about history so how can I engage with it’.(Learning Officer 1, Historic Environment Scotland)
‘Sharing common identities, and it can be that those identities are contested and complicated, and I think it’s really important that we’re honest and recognize that’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘…heritage needs communities more than communities need heritage’.(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘[When volunteering and working on at-risk heritage] people feel that they’re leaving something for future generations. You also get this kind of enhanced sense of purpose and meaning and belonging and identity’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
3.2.2. Personal Well-Being Benefits
‘… one of the key things is about meaning making and belonging and seeing yourself in a broader perspective. There’s been some work on prehistoric landscapes and well-being and the kind of therapeutic benefits of engaging with those parts of the historic environment and seeing yourself in deep time…. The evidence suggests that you’re part of something that’s bigger than you, and actually that gives you more sense of purpose… as you can you see your role within a broader perspective’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘I do think the historic environment and archaeology are particularly good at that, giving you a sense of perspective, understanding what your place is in the world… Which leads to things like pride, I think are really crucial because there’s lots of the activities that whether it be volunteering or visiting or living in a place and engaging with something locally where the fact that you have a purpose’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘Heritage is part of the umbrella of social care. It’s not a place of social services, it’s not a place that you would necessarily go to in crisis, although some people do, I think for me it comes under notions of social care and social togetherness. So I think that’s truly special’.(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘There is a role that still could be played there…in just sharing information and trying to make accessible those activities…that information, that support you can give them, some sort of advice and you can offer a lot through volunteering there as well. So, it’s just linking up all this and creating that, you know, belt of support around. Then the health system will ideally take the most complex and serious needs…’(Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘Bit more beauty in our life, you know…. Because life can be pretty good. And just now in the struggling with the cost of living crisis and stuff, you know? So I’m a great advocate of more culture, the more knowledge of a person’s background, the more confidence…’(Photovoice Facilitator)
‘I approach all my work from the perspective of neurodivergence, that I don’t expect neurotypicality in anyone, and I think constructing sessions around emotion, connecting with emotion, finding themselves. … I would suggest you provide the tools, the space, the warmth and the kindness for them to be themselves and to come alive in those spaces’.(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘I think one of the main things for me … is the ability to dwell. And I think there are very few spaces. Parks, possibly, but I think there’s very few spaces that you can dwell and just sit and think. And be potentially warm, or at least not exposed to the elements and not be questioned for doing so. And I think that’s incredibly precious’.(Freelance Learning Officer)
‘It obviously gets people in a social environment… For the most part older folk, it can be isolated within their communities… From my experience, I’ve seen them growing in confidence and saying “We can go here, we can go there”’.(Photovoice Facilitator)
‘…You know, thinking with dementia groups, it’s memories of cooking… the Great Hall, you know, which is basically a dining room…. So I find with a lot of the groups with dementia it’s recalling memory they’ll connect to. I’ll never forget there’s one brilliant guy in one of the groups we’re talking about artefacts and things from the from the Great Hall and we had a candlestick holder, really quite a neat one…. And he told us, actually, how you used to clean that out…He said my parents used to have one like that’(Learning Officer 2, Historic Environment Scotland)
3.3. Need for a Wider Knowledge Base on Aging, Well-Being and the Local Historic Environment
‘…the gaps are really under that place based bit… is more complicated I think because it feeds into all sorts of topics about… intrinsic qualities of place that contribute towards well-being… social determinants of health and well-being… also how do people utilize place’?(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘How can we step in and create a better environment for them? A better life experience for them and boost some of those characteristics that could actually make their life feel a lot more positive, like we should be trying to fill that gap’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘And then the question for us I guess as a sector is that [identity and belonging] may exist to a certain extent without anybody doing anything because it’s just “I have an attachment to a place”. But are there things that we could do knowing that whether that be through a local museum or whatever, that would actually enable us to, to build and develop that further’?(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘We’re going to tour it to other sites… So this kind of keeps going like this. I think the key thing is making good connections with people—partnerships that is. You know, if it works it’s great. And then it just tends to keep running and we find the budget…’(Learning Officer 2, Historic Environment Scotland)
‘…better equipped to know how to reach individual older people, what kind, what is the local community, infrastructure … that a museum should be connecting with because those are the community anchor organizations that do know where people are and what challenges they face. And if there was a sort of more default that cultural institutions worked with those anchor institutions’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘But you know, people hadn’t really heard of social prescribing. It’s really a phrase [that] makes sense within medical circles in terms of it’s kind of medical language to appeal to clinicians to get them to consider sort of broader social interventions…’(Social Prescribing Professional)
‘… what we try to do is almost like piggyback, you know, on a lot of these things. And we’re not trying to steal their ideas. We’re just trying to use existing opportunities to try out something, to see how it looks for here. Because even from a small, cheap pilot, the little information there can help us then to make the case and ask for not only more money but more serious investment strategically to place this somewhere. And because we managed … to launch the strategy and that helped us to kind of embed well-being as an outcome and as an aim into our corporate strategy and that that was the big kind of milestone for us. You know that changed things because now everybody understands this is something we have to be working towards’.(Heritage Professional, Historic England)
‘There is an onus on the larger organizations to support the smaller organizations to do that… I absolutely think that smaller cultural institutions or heritage organizations or local societies and clubs could be, could be doing what these larger organizations are doing’.(Senior Heritage Professional, Historic England)
4. Discussion
4.1. Use of Technology
4.2. Widening Participation
‘…working class people value heritage highly, but at the same time do not appear to prioritize knowledge gathering as a reason for participating in cultural activities such as museum visits…’ Instead, they ‘…were more inclined to cite the desire to spend time with family and friends as a motivating factor’.
4.3. Social Engagement with Heritage
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Role | Experience in Sector | Expertise in |
---|---|---|
Senior heritage professional, Historic England | 20+ years | Heritage and Well-being |
Heritage professional, Historic England | 15 years | Heritage and Well-being |
Social prescribing professional | 2 years | Ageing and Well-being |
Learning officer 1, Historic Environment Scotland | 30 years | Heritage and Well-being |
Learning officer 2, Historic Environment Scotland | 23 years | Heritage and Well-being |
Freelance learning officer | 17 years | Heritage and Well-being |
Photovoice facilitator | 8 years | Heritage and Well-being |
Public health manager | 8 years | Ageing, Public Health and Well-being |
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© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Bowden, J.; Woolrych, R.; Kennedy, C.J. Situating Place and Wellbeing Within Heritage Interactions for Older Adults. Heritage 2025, 8, 131. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8040131
Bowden J, Woolrych R, Kennedy CJ. Situating Place and Wellbeing Within Heritage Interactions for Older Adults. Heritage. 2025; 8(4):131. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8040131
Chicago/Turabian StyleBowden, Jessica, Ryan Woolrych, and Craig J. Kennedy. 2025. "Situating Place and Wellbeing Within Heritage Interactions for Older Adults" Heritage 8, no. 4: 131. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8040131
APA StyleBowden, J., Woolrych, R., & Kennedy, C. J. (2025). Situating Place and Wellbeing Within Heritage Interactions for Older Adults. Heritage, 8(4), 131. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8040131