Culture, Lifestyle and the Meaning of a Dwelling Henny Coolen and Ritsuko Ozaki Henny Coolen OTB Research Institute for Housing, Urban and Mobility Studies Delft University of Technology Jaffalaan 9 2628 BX Delft The Netherlands Telephone: +31 15 278 2747 Telefax: +31 15 278 4422 E-mail: h.coolen@otb.tudelft.nl Ritsuko Ozaki Tanaka Business School Imperial College London South Kensington Campus London SW7 2AZ United Kingdom Telephone: +44 20 7594 5942 Telefax: +44 20 7594 5915 E-mail: r.ozaki@imperial.ac.uk Abstract The meaning of a dwelling, sometimes called the meaning of “home,” has been studied from many different perspectives. In our research we use a conceptual framework that is based on two theoretical distinctions. The first theoretical distinction concerns the concept of dwelling, defined as a system of settings in which a certain system of activities takes place and makes a distinction between fixed features (physical aspects), semi-fixed features (furnishings) and non-fixed features (activities and behaviour). The second one concerns the concept of meaning, distinguishing between high-level meanings (e.g. world views), middlelevel meanings (e.g. values) and lower-level meanings (e.g. manifest functions). The focus of our own research is on the middle-level and lower-level meanings of fixed features. Our conceptual framework seems to have several interfaces with the more familiar notions of culture and lifestyle, which are quite frequently used in studies on the meaning of a dwelling. Although these notions have been touched upon in our research, their possible role as analytical concepts has not clearly been indicated. The purpose of the paper is therefore to find out whether the notions of culture and lifestyle can become an integral part of our conceptual framework, and what the added value of integrating these notions is for understanding the meaning of a dwelling. This venture will be illustrated with empirical case studies, many from our own research. Keywords: Meaning of a dwelling, lifestyle, culture, “home” 1. Introduction The meaning of a dwelling, sometimes called the meaning of “home,” has been studied from many different perspectives in sociology, psychology and environment-behaviour studies (Després, 1991; Moore, 2000). These studies, however, have mainly investigated the concept of home holistically, not the features of a dwelling. It is, nonetheless, important to explore these aspects of a dwelling, because meaning provides much of the rationale for the ways in which dwellings are shaped and used. This means that their occupiers attach meanings to dwelling features, which, when shared and recognized by others, communicate their identity, status and values. Drawing on Rapoport’s theoretical discussions on the meaning of a dwelling (Rapoport, 1981; 1988; 1990) and on Hall’s distinction of different features of a dwelling (Hall, 1966), this paper will present a conceptual framework that we are using for our own research on the meaning of a dwelling (e.g. Coolen en Hoekstra, 2001; Ozaki, 2003). This framework has several interfaces with the more familiar notions of culture and lifestyle, which are quite frequently used in studies on the meaning of a dwelling. However, although these notions have been touched upon in various housing research, their possible role as analytical concepts has not clearly been indicated. The purpose of this paper is, therefore, to find out whether the notions of culture and lifestyles can become an integral part of our conceptual framework, and what the added value of integrating these notions is for understanding the meaning of a dwelling. The present paper first discusses Rapoport’s three levels of meanings and Hall’s three types of features, and then introduces our conceptual framework based on these two theoretical distinctions. Next, it discusses the notions of culture and lifestyle, and their role in our conceptual framework, and presents case studies from our own research to illustrate our arguments. Finally, the paper will draw conclusions on the way in which the notions of culture and lifestyle have been integrated in, and can contribute to, the studies of the meaning of a dwelling. 2. Levels of meaning and types of features 2.1. Three levels of meaning The starting point in the discussion of meaning is the view that people pursue certain goals and values. This assumption can be found in studies, for instance, of the meaning of material objects (Csikszentmihalyi and Rochberg-Halton, 1981) and of the instrumental value of consumer goods (Gutman, 1982). Goals and values also play an important role in the behaviour and preferences of people (Rokeach, 1973; Bettman, 1979). People’s preferences for certain objects, for example, are not neutral. People prefer certain objects because they believe these objects contribute to the achievement of their goals and values. So, the preferences people have and the choices they make are considered to be functional for the achievement of their goals and values. The meaning an object has for people lies in this functional relationship between the object on the one hand and the goals and values of 2 people on the other. This view of the functional relationships between the two seems closely related to Weber’s concept of “Zweck Rationalität” – goal rationality (Weber, 1972). At first sight, this conception of meaning does seem at odds with many studies on the meaning of a dwelling. Nevertheless, there are some striking parallels with the approaches of two eminent scholars who have paid close attention to the relationships between people and environments. One of these scholars is Gibson whose Theory of Affordances has a lot in common with our conception of meaning. The other scholar is Rapoport, whose ideas about both the meaning of the built environment and about the levels of meaning in the built environment have, at least partly, shaped our ideas as put forward in this paper. According to Gibson (1979), the affordances of the environment are what it offers to the human being, what it provides or furnishes, either good or ill. What an object affords an individual is what the individual might be able to do with that object. The affordances of an object are its potential functions. Affordances are relative to the individual. An affordance is neither a property of the environment nor a property of the individual, but a relation between an individual and its environment. Kaplan and Kaplan (1982) suggest that unlike the affordances offered by objects, the issue with respect to the environment is what an individual can do not with it, but in it. Rapoport has written numerous publications about the meaning of the built environment. Several of these are relevant from the perspective of this paper (Rapoport, 1988, 1990, 1995). According to Rapoport (1988), meaning is an important mechanism linking environments and people. All environments are critically related to meaning, which provides much of the rationale for the ways in which they are shaped and used. He also makes an important remark that the common distinction between function and meaning is misguided. Meaning is not only part of function, but it is often the most important function of the built environment. In this context, Rapoport (1988) distinguishes three levels of meaning in the built environment. High-level meanings are related to cosmologies, world views, philosophical systems, etc.; middle level meanings convey identity, status, wealth, power, etc., which are also called latent functions; lower-level meanings are everyday and instrumental meanings, such as accessibility, seating arrangements, movement, etc., which are also called manifest functions. According to Rapoport, architectural theory has traditionally emphasized high-level meanings and archaeology has increasingly emphasized middle-level meanings. However, everyday meanings have mostly been neglected even in environment-behaviour studies, although they are essential for understanding the built environment. Lower-level meanings are important in all settings; they may not be sufficient to grasp the overall meaning of a dwelling, but they are always necessary. People’s activities and built environments are primarily linked by lower-level meanings, although middle level meanings also tend to be important. 2.2. Three types of features A dwelling is a complex product. It comprises many different elements, ranging from structural frames to interior fixtures and fittings. Moreover, a dwelling is not only a physical space in which people live, but also a space where social interactions take place. Therefore, the layout and structure of a dwelling, the use of space, and activities that take place there all express the meaning of a dwelling as a social unit (e.g. Saunders, 1990; Williams, 1987). 3 Rapoport (1981) defines the concept of a dwelling as a system of settings in which a certain set of activities takes place. He then classifies, based on a distinction first proposed by Hall (1966), features of the dwelling (as a system of settings) into three types: fixed-feature elements, semi-fixed-feature elements and non-fixed-feature elements. First, fixed features are defined as those that are basically fixed or those that change rarely and slowly, although these features may also be subjected to surface treatments (e.g. decorative treatments and finishes). Architectural or structural elements, such as walls, ceilings and floors, are included in this category. In many industrialized societies, fixed features are under the control of codes and regulations. It has been argued that, because of the physical, economic, and political difficulty that an individual faces in changing these conditions, fixed features are more likely to reflect social, organizational, cultural, and institutional meanings rather than those of the individual (Ahrentzen, 2002). Second, semi-fixed features are described as anything from the type and arrangement of furniture and soft furnishings (e.g. curtains) to more decorative ornaments (e.g. plants), which may change fairly quickly and easily. Rapoport claims that these semi-fixed-feature elements – i.e. the contents to be used in the physical setting – are inclined to show, for instance, the identity of the occupiers more than fixed-feature elements do because they are rich in personal meanings (also see Brown, 1987). Semi-fixed features also include personal objects (e.g. framed photographs and holiday souvenirs). They carry meanings to the occupiers by printing the identity onto the place (Becker and Coniglio, 1975; Leavitt and Loukaitou-Sideris; 1995); and a display of such objects is a reminder of family, friends, groups and other social organisations (Després, 1991). Third, non-fixed-feature elements are non-environmental, behavioural cues. These include clothing and languages that are used for, and activities that take place in, particular parts or settings in the dwelling. These non-fixed features communicate the occupiers’ social identity and status. 3. Conceptual framework Combining the theoretical distinction concerning the levels of meaning in the built environment with the one regarding the different types of features of a dwelling results in a conceptual framework for studying the meaning of a dwelling that is sketched in figure 1. This framework has been used by the authors in several studies (Coolen and Hoekstra, 2001; Coolen, 2002; Ozaki, 2001; 2002; 2003) and forms the basis for the discussion that follows. In this framework, the starting point for research on meaning is one of the types of features, or even a specific feature, of which meanings attached by occupiers one may discover through, for instance, interviewing. The dotted lines indicate that the relationships between the levels of meaning and the types of features are manifold. The relationships between their manifest and latent functions, which are relationships between their lowerand middle-level meanings, are represented in the vertical links. Horizontal relationships may also occur when the reasons for preference or choice are given by another feature, rather than higher-level meanings: for instance, when an apartment (fixed feature) is preferred or chosen because it has no garden (fixed feature), or when a certain size of living room (fixed feature) is preferred because of the way it can be furnished (semi-fixed feature). 4 Figure 1 The conceptual framework for studying the meaning of a dwelling Higher-level meanings Middle-level meanings (latent functions) Lower-level meanings (manifest functions) Fixed features Semi-fixed features Non-fixed features Most previous research into the meaning of a dwelling has taken a holistic view of a dwelling, not looking specifically at features of a dwelling (Rapoport, 1995). However, the approach of this paper deviates from this conventional practice: we deconstruct the holistic view of a dwelling. Based on the notion of affordances, we investigate the relationship between dwelling occupiers and dwelling features, and what the occupiers do, or want to do, in the dwelling. In order to do so, we need to look at the dwelling in terms of different types of features and different levels of functions. This paper focuses on fixed features of dwellings, although references to other types of features will be made. Fixed features reflect the way in which people live (or intend to live), and consequently, the manifest and latent functions of the space. For example, to have more bedrooms expresses the goals and aims that people have in mind. Such a dwelling attribute as more bedrooms will provide personal spaces for individual family members (manifest function = everyday, instrumental meaning), and this will make it possible to have more privacy among the family members (latent function = value). In other words, people’s beliefs and values are reflected in their evaluation of physical attributes of a dwelling, which they believe facilitate or hinder the achievement of their goals (Coolen and Hoekstra, 2001). Similarly, the spatial organisation of a dwelling reflects social relationships in the home (Rapoport, 1981). The way in which rooms are arranged reflects the use of domestic space, and therefore, the relationship between people (Ozaki, 2001; 2002; 2003). As Saunders (1989) puts it, social space has meanings because people attach meanings there; these meanings do not inhere in the spaces that they occupy, but it is social relations which are realized within the spaces that have meanings (Saunders, 1989). Therefore, social relationships in the home (e.g. the relationships between men and women, between adults and children, and between household members and visitors) classify the space and indicate the way in which they try to give meanings to a place (Rapoport, 1981). Separating features of a dwelling by their nature and looking specifically at a type of feature will help us to understand the manifold, vertical and sometimes horizontal relationships between features and meanings, which, then, will allow us to explore the meaning of a dwelling in an in-depth way. 5 4. Notions of culture and lifestyle and their role in our conceptual framework This framework has a number of interfaces with the more familiar notions of culture and lifestyle. Although these notions are quite frequently used in the studies of the meaning of a dwelling and are referred to in various housing research, their possible role as analytical concepts has not clearly been indicated. Hence, we need to see if the notions of culture and lifestyle can have a role and add value in our conceptual framework. First, culture is a relatively organised system of shared meanings (Geertz, 1973). Culture denotes a historically transmitted pattern of meanings embodied in symbols. It is a system of inherited conceptions expressed in symbolic forms, by which people communicate, perpetuate, and develop their knowledge about and attitudes towards life. This view is shared by other scholars. Douglas (1966), for example, sees culture as the public, standardised values of a group. According to her, culture forms categories, or patterns, in which ideas and values are tidily ordered; and these categories are public matters and cannot easily be revised although a challenge is not to be neglected. Similarly, Hall (1997) says that culture is defined in terms of shared meanings or shared conceptual maps, as people interpret the world in largely similar ways, and because of that, they are able to build up a shared meaning and construct a social world which they inhabit together. Thus, culture can be defined as a system of shared meanings. This notion of culture helps us to understand the vertical relationship between meanings in our framework. Both culture and the high-level meanings essentially govern the way in which people behave (i.e. values and norms = middle-level meanings/latent functions), which then influences the way in which space is shaped and used in everyday life (low-level meaning/manifest function). As Rapoport (1990) puts it, the settings and behavioural repertories are culture specific, and the relationship between activities and settings is inherently cultural. Furthermore, people are classified into groups based on the beliefs and ideologies of society or a human group. Such social classification underlies conceptual boundaries between people, which are then used to define their daily affairs and which restrict and regulated the interaction of people and the use of space. (Laurence, 1984; 1996) So, the meaning of a dwelling reflects unwritten social rules and conventions, which constitute a vertical meaning relationship. Culture itself cannot be observed, but is realized through latent and manifest functions: culture as a system of shared meanings creates values and norms, which are then embodied in people’s daily activities. In short, the notion of culture offers a clear vertical relationship between high-, middle- and low-meanings; and such a relationship provides part of the rationale behind people’s action – i.e. the reasons for their preference for certain features in their dwelling and their intentions of using the domestic space in certain ways. It gives insight into the choice and evaluation that people make by clarifying the cultural factors behind their decisions; and this way, the meaning of a dwelling feature become clear. Secondly, lifestyle is a term defined in a number of different ways in literature. It is therefore necessary to see how each of the definitions works in relation to our conceptual framework, in order to find out if the notion of lifestyle can be an integral part of our framework and what would be the added value. Rapoport propagates since 1977 (Rapoport, 1977) a definition of lifestyle that was put forward by Michelson and Reed (1970) in an unpublished paper in which lifestyle is defined as the result of choices on how to allocate resources. Contemporary British sociologists (e.g. 6 Chaney, 1996) share this view. Chaney (1996) considers that lifestyles are based on the way in which people use means and resources they have, rather than the means and resources themselves, and puts that this is the reason why lifestyles are seen as a distinctively modern form of status grouping. These views have a great deal in common with our conceptual framework. As stated above, we pay close attention to the relationship between people and built environments and to the way in which they make choices. People make a choice in order to achieve certain goals and aims and to reflect or construct the desired image of themselves and their lives. Thus, it is all about allocating their resources (e.g. money, time, attention, effort, etc.) to their choice(s). In other words, the resources are allocated and appropriated to the chosen dwelling features in order to achieve the realization of the goals and aims (latent functions). So, choice does have a functional dimension. In fact, our conceptual framework has already dealt with what Rapoport and contemporary British sociologists mean by lifestyle. Our framework allows us to investigate why people prefer, choose and have particular features in their dwelling and how they allocate and appropriate their resources to attain these features to realise their goals. The definition that is used in marketing (e.g. Wedel and Kamakura, 1998) is that lifestyle is a combination of activities, interests and opinions. However, this is indeed expressed by “non-fixed features” in our framework. As mentioned above, there is sometimes a horizontal relationship between features in explaining why certain fixed features are wanted. For example, a large living room may be required because the occupiers like to throw big parties in their home. The combination of activities, interests and opinions is already dealt with in our framework. Hawkins (1998) sees lifestyle as an outward expression of one’s self-concept, which he says is the totality of the individual’s thoughts and feelings. This is in fact about making a choice to realise one’s self-concept. He says that self-concept is formed through social actions; in other words, lifestyles are determined or influenced by such factors as culture, sub-culture (e.g. family, social classes, etc.), values and personality. This cause-effect relationship between self-concept and cultural determinants is exactly what our framework comprises in the relationship between lower- and higher-meanings. Similarly, Connell (1998) considers that one’s lifestyle is a function of individual characteristics that have been shared and formed through social interaction, and is an expression of one’s attitude towards life. Thus, he says, important human activities are accommodated in a dwelling, which then expresses their approach to life. This view can also be seen as a choice to make one’s values represented; and this is again covered by our way of thinking – i.e. people choose in order to achieve the goals and aims and to realise their values and desired image, and they allocate and appropriate their resources to make this choice. Seen this way, the notion of lifestyle does not seem to have a role in our framework and to add value to it. Although it is often used in housing research, its definition is not clear. More importantly, its various definitions are already dealt with in our framework. The bottom line of the discussion on meaning is the view that people pursue certain goals: their preferences for certain objects are at least partly explained in terms of the achievement of those goals. The meaning of dwelling features lies in a functional vertical relationship between features, lower-level meanings and goals and values (middle-level meanings), which are governed by high-level meaning (i.e. culture), or in a horizontal relationship between different types of 7 features (fixed, semi-fixed and non-fixed features). So, what the notion of lifestyle could offer is already included in this framework. Hence, we conclude that the integration of the notion of culture will offer us a more contextual understanding of the vertical relationship between meanings of a dwelling that represents part of the mechanism of the way in which a dwelling is shared and used and some of the rationale behind people’s choice of dwelling features. However, the notion of lifestyle is superfluous in our conceptual framework. 5. Case studies This section presents case studies from our own research. The aim of the case studies is to utilise the relationship between dwelling features and the meanings in order to illustrate the above arguments. As mentioned above, our case studies have focused on people’s choices of, and preferences for, fixed features and explored the meanings, presenting the relationship between people and the fixed feature (i.e. what the feature affords to people – what they do in the feature). The first case comes from the Netherlands. It concerns a study on the meanings of preferences for residential environment features of apartment dwellers. The data were collected on two locations: a suburban area on the outskirts of The Hague, and an urban area located in the centre of Rotterdam. For the purpose of this paper the distinction between the two sub-populations is irrelevant. A total of 45 semi-structured interviews were conducted at the respondents’ homes. The convenience sample is relatively old with an average age of 51 years, and it consists for more than 90% of one and two-person households without children. The respondents had to select features they considered as important from two sets of cards – one set containing dwelling features and the other containing neighbourhood features. Subsequently, for each of the important features, the preferred level or category was ascertained. For example, if the number of rooms was mentioned as an important feature, the respondent had to indicate how many rooms s/he preferred. Eventually, the meanings that were associated with each feature were identified through a semi-structured interviewing technique called laddering. This interviewing method makes it possible to construct from the interviews so-called meaning structures that represent structural relationships between dwelling features and their meanings. A few examples of such individual meaning structures are given in figure 2. Individual meaning structures can be aggregated into meaning networks that can be analysed by means of network analysis methods. This way of looking at the data will not be pursued further here; the interested reader is referred to Coolen (2004). For illustrative purposes, only the three dwelling features that were most often mentioned as important by the respondents are treated here. These features and the meanings that were associated with these features are presented in table 1. The fixed features are in the columns and the rows represent the meanings, the numbers in the cells of the table show how many times the respondents associated each meaning with each feature. 8 Figure 2 Some examples of individual meaning structures W ell-being Freedom Comfort Social contacts Privacy Clean Comfort Furnishings Activities Family Furnishings No garden Space Furnishings M ulti-functionality Space Apartment Size of living room Size of living room Number of rooms Number of rooms Atmosphere Comfort Health Apartment Manifest functions - lower-level meanings - that are frequently mentioned are space and multi-functionality, while comfort, well-being, freedom, privacy and social contacts are the most often mentioned latent functions, i.e. middle-level meanings. With respect to the conceptual framework, not only do vertical relationships occur, but horizontal ones also do. For instance, the fixed feature, no garden, is considered as a meaning of the fixed feature apartment; and the semi-fixed feature, furnishings, is mentioned as a meaning of both fixed features, size of living room and number of rooms. In order to understand many of these meanings in terms of higher-level meanings, two socio-cultural developments in the Netherlands seems especially relevant (Sociaal Cultureel Planbureau, 1998). The first one is the process of individualization that has resulted in on average smaller households and in more space per occupier in dwellings. The second development concerns the phenomenon that older people remain active and living on their own much longer, partly because of changes in their housing preferences. Since the employment of the people between 50 and 65 years of age has strongly decreased, the dwelling has become the centre of their life at a relatively young age. A large part of their daily life is spent in and around the dwelling, which forms the centre of their activities, and for which enough space is wanted. Keeping in mind that our sample consists of relatively old people, several of the meanings that are found in table 1 can be interpreted against the background of these developments. The appearance of such meanings as space, activities, multi-functionality, no garden, comfort, atmosphere, social contacts, health, furnishings, privacy and well-being is well in line with one or both socio-cultural developments just sketched. In addition to these meanings such as freedom, family and cleanness have a long tradition in Dutch culture, and are highly valued especially by the older generations. So, this study shows that people can state which fixed dwelling features they consider as important and can express what they mean to them. In terms of the conceptual framework both vertical and horizontal relationships 9 between features and meanings are observed. It has also been indicated that the manifest and latent functions found in the study can be interpreted in terms of Dutch culture and of socio-cultural developments that have taken place over the last 25 years. Table 1 Freedom Privacy Comfort Space Atmosphere inside Atmosphere outside Enjoying life Social contacts Health No garden Activities Furnishings Multifunctionality Well-being Clean Tradition Family Total The meanings of three dwelling features Dwelling type = Apartment 11 6 25 15 7 Size of living room 14 3 12 21 5 Number of rooms 14 14 13 5 5 4 6 11 8 Total 25 23 51 49 17 5 9 5 16 9 23 107 108 9 24 4 28 11 8 5 25 24 9 7 1 9 118 41 7 1 9 333 13 The second case study is from England. A study of English culture and house design (Ozaki, 2001, 2002, 2003) reported how the internal layout was linked to cultural norms. The use and configurations of rooms have changed in accordance with changes in social relations and family structures. Strict social relationships among household members were reflected in the way domestic space was used and shaped. For example, with the strict gender division of labour in the Victorian era, women were confined to the back region of the house and men in middle-class households had the male sphere in the front region (Williams 1987). With the strict division between adults and children, and between family members and non-family members, adults and guests were expected to enter the house through the front door, whereas children, servants and trades people did through the back (Goffman 1959). When middle-class women came to take over the work of servants and play the role of both a domestic and the hostess, middle-class families developed less formal relationships between husbands and wives, and parents and children (Burnett 1986; Goffman 1959; Ravetz 1989, Ravetz and Turkington 1995); and this brought the kitchen-diner where people ate in the place the meal had been prepared (Burnett 1986; Saunders 1990). In other words, separate rooms in the dwelling (= fixed feature) expressed separate roles and status of household members (= values and norms; middle-level meanings), which were governed by the Victorian middle-class culture (high-level meanings), through people’s daily activities (= manifest functions; lower-level meanings). In recent years, a new house type has gained popularity in a certain section of the UK housing market. Urban developments and industrial building conversion projects typically have an all-in-one style of the living room (where the kitchen and dining space are 10 integrated into the living room), as can be seen in other cities in the world (e.g. Zukin, 1982). This means the traditional “boundaries” in domestic space (e.g. the front vs. the back) are no longer valid in this type of housing. These new trends would mark a significant break from traditional suburban middle-class ideal. Suburban housing with separate rooms had become a symbol of traditional family values with the separation of home and work and separate conjugal roles over a century ago, and still remains a model of contemporary house design (Burnett 1986). In order to explore the meaning attached to open-plan layouts, a total of 32 in-depth interviews were conducted with residents who lived in the loft-style flat in the City Fringe area and Isle of Dogs in London, where much former industrial stock and conversion projects can be found. The request for the interview was sent to 10 residents committees in the areas, and 32 owner-occupiers from 7 different schemes responded and offered an interview. Of these 32 respondents, 18 are men and 14 are women; the age groups range from the 20s to over 60. They are either single or married/co-habiting without children, with the exception of two respondents. The investigation has found that the residents tend to have “liberal” social relations between the household members: the communication or interaction between partners is regarded as vital. Interview respondents stress that they share household chores and that it is important for one of the partners (usually, the female) not to be excluded from social occasions that they often hold in their home. They consider “being in touch” to be very important and therefore chose the open layout. This more equal and social culture in their domestic arena materializes through integrating everyone and entertaining casually, and underlies their choice and evaluation of dwelling features (Ozaki, 2004)1. This study presents the vertical relationship between meanings concerning the open-plan living room: liberal culture (as a system of shared meanings) – more equal gender relations and non-exclusiveness (values and norms) – use of the open-plan, such as cooking together, communicating, entertaining a lot, etc. (manifest functions). The mechanism behind the choice of the open-plan layout is clearly shown. 6. Conclusion In our own research on the lower- and middle-level meanings of fixed dwelling features, we make use of a conceptual framework, which is based on two theoretical distinctions – one distinguishing types of features and the other distinguishing levels of meanings; and this framework has several interfaces with the more commonly used notions of culture and lifestyle. The purpose of this paper was to find out whether the notions of culture and lifestyle could become an integral part of our conceptual framework, and what the added value of integrating these notions is for understanding the meaning of a dwelling. For this purpose, a conceptual analysis, in which several definitions of culture and lifestyle were considered, was performed first. This analysis made clear that the notion of culture, defined as a historically transmitted system of shared meanings by which people communicate and develop their place in and towards life, can easily be integrated in our framework as a high-level meaning. Culture governs the way in which people think about and use a dwelling, and as such it influences our preferences for and choices of dwelling features. It clarifies the relationship between people and the dwelling: why people do what they do in certain features, how they use them, and consequently, what those features mean and what at least part of the mechanism behind people’s housing-related activities is. 1 This study is sponsored by the Bernard Sunley Charitable Foundation. 11 Culture therefore provides us with contextual information and helps us to understand the vertical relationship of meanings of our conceptual framework. The case studies subsequently showed that the notion of culture has added value if it is used in this way. Several lower- and middle-level meanings that occurred in our empirical studies could be better understood if they were considered in the context of cultural developments. The notion of lifestyle, on the other hand, does not add anything, as we are already looking at the way people allocate their resources and chose certain features in order to achieve their goals, values and desired image. The lifestyle issue is already dealt with in our framework in a systematic way, which makes the notion redundant from the perspective of this framework. Finally, the case studies also show that the approach of this paper in which we deconstruct the holistic view of a dwelling and focus on separate dwelling features, makes sense. People are not only able to relate themselves to features, but can also express what they mean to them. 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