Accommodation and care for older people is commonly thought of in relation
to residential care homes: the collective settings with communal lounges an
d dining rooms, where older people may live what seems to be a fine balance
between individual and group routines. Yet, while there have been changes
to the living arrangements of people in relatively large collective groups,
the ideal put forward as a basis for care settings has remained that of 'h
ome', with the family model still central. With the tensions between public
and private, domestic and institutional living, regulated and non-regulate
d settings, all too obvious, this article uses a pilot study in Bedfordshir
e, Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire of registered small homes with less th
an four residential places, often run by the proprietor and her family, to
consider whether residential homes may replicate a homely environment, or w
hether the model has run its course.