http://Older adults value autonomy and independence as key features of healthy aging. SMART technology has enormous potential to foster healthy aging and independence by combining elements of gerontology and rehabilitation with technology to create solutions for disability related to impairment and/or aging. Most research to date has focused on maintaining autonomy and independence in community; less attention has been placed on understanding how to maintain autonomy and independence when ‘home’ is an institutional setting such as long term care. Current solutions are often not personalized or lack long-term support; those that are individualized are often labour intensive and costly. The goal of Living More with SMART Technology (LivMoreSMARTech) is to support technology development and use that is transdisciplinary and ‘fit for purpose’ for improving the independence, functioning, wellbeing and quality of life of older adults in continuing care. Our aims are: 1) to understand the lived experience, needs and desires for well-being among older adults with complex conditions in continuing care; 2) to implement and evaluate off-the-shelf technology solutions, individually customized to maximize well-being, that are supported and sustainable; and 3) to understand how best to incorporate sustainable, person-centred technology solutions into long term care and continuing care settings that result in scalable outcomes including adoption into organizational policies, procedures, programs and care planning. We employ a co-design approach to empower older adults to actively participate in the research - from expressing needs and desires in order to maximize their wellbeing, to involvement in planning of potential solutions, implementing solutions, and evaluating the solutions. Knowledge mobilization activities will be employed throughout. LivMoreSMARTech will contribute novel and necessary insights to the overall AGE-WELL initiative and provide models, guidelines and recommendations to support technology solutions in continuing care, a sector that has been under-represented in the context of aging and technology.