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Whether and to what extent older residents are satisfied with a community’s public spaces, and how to assess and design that infrastructure, are questions of growing interest to planning professionals and policy makers. In part, this interest is a recent and perhaps belated acknowledgement of the ‘senior surge’ that is occurring in both urban and rural communities. It is also a reflection of the lack of consistent theoretical frameworks and practical guidance in urban planning regarding the definition, components of or strategies for designing communities that are conducive to healthy and independent aging. While the age-friendly framework developed by the World Health Organization is an important and necessary first step towards planning age-friendly communities, planning professionals require more than globally generalized frameworks to design public spaces that meet the particular needs of local residents across the life spectrum. Drawing on academic and professional consulting work with urban and rural communities in southern Ontario, symposium participants will explore through active discussion and design exercises: