Sensory garden
A sensory garden is a self-contained garden area that allows visitors to enjoy a wide variety of sensory experiences.[2] Sensory gardens are designed to provide opportunities to stimulate the senses, both individually and in combination, in ways that users may not usually encounter.[3]
Sensory gardens have a wide range of educational and recreational applications.[2] They can be used in the education of special-needs students, including autistic people.[4] As a form of horticultural therapy, they may act as therapeutic gardens to help in the care of people with dementia.[5]
Sensory gardens can be designed in such a way as to be accessible and enjoyable for both disabled and non-disabled users. A sensory garden, for example, may contain features accessible to the disabled individual such as: scented and edible plants, sculptures and sculpted handrails, water features designed to make sound and play over the hands, textured touch-pads, magnifying-glass screens, braille and audio induction loop descriptions. Depending on the user group, other provisions may integrate sound and music more centrally to combine the play needs of younger users with their sensory needs.
Many sensory gardens devote themselves to providing experience for multiple senses; those specialising in scent are sometimes called scented gardens, those specialising in music/sound are sound gardens where the equipment doubles up to provides an enhanced opportunity for strategic developmental, learning and educational outcomes.
Sensory gardens usually have an enhanced infrastructure to permit wheelchair access and meet other accessibility concerns; the design and layout provides a stimulating journey through the senses, heightening awareness, and bringing positive learning experiences.
Design
[edit]Sensory garden design is generally based around the five Aristotelian senses, but it can also include other senses such as proprioception and balance.[6] In addition to plants, non-living elements, such as water features and sculptures, may be incorporated.[7]
Sight
[edit]Sight components in a sensory garden include traditional garden elements like colorful plants and flowers, which are sometimes clustered together to assist people with vision impairments.[8] These plants can also be used to attract birds and butterflies to the garden, which can add additional sight variety.[8]
Hearing
[edit]Sound components in a sensory garden are often things that make sounds naturally in a breeze. This includes plants like bamboo, grasses, trees, as well as non-living elements like bells and wind chimes. Water features and birds are also common sound components.
Less common sound components include things like hand instruments (such as drums), echo spaces, and chiming stepping stones.
Sensory dementia gardens
[edit]Sensory gardens can be designed specifically for people with dementia,[9] a condition that can affect different parts of the brain and many aspects of everyday life, including memory, in which everyday tasks such as walking or eating typically become difficult. Sensory or therapeutic gardens can be used to help reduce the symptoms of dementia without the use of drugs through stimulation of the senses, exercising various parts of the brain. Sensory gardens may elicit positive emotions in people living with dementia, and help improve their quality of life.[5]
Design characteristics may include water features that produces soothing sounds, pick-and-sniff herb and flower beds, and benches with different types of sand or pebbles to sink their feet into. For example, in a sensory garden located in Port Macquarie, Australia, one person enjoys sinking his toes into the sand as it elicits memories of Australia for him, while the gravel reminds him of Scotland where he was born which he does not enjoy as much.[9] Other potential benefits include a calming and relaxing place providing an easy and safe way to exercise with feelings of independence.
Gallery
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This sensory garden was designed for children with special needs at St Christopher's School in Westbury Park, Bristol, England.
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The Blindengarten in the Bad Homburg Spa Park (Kurpark) in Germany is a "smell and touch" garden comprising eight thematically planted raised beds (culinary herbs, medicinal herbs, roses, grasses, etc.) arranged around a central fountain that can provide acoustic orientation for blind and visually-impaired people.[10]
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An experiential feature in the "World of the Senses" (Welt der Sinne). The design of this extensive sensory garden and house in Bremervörde, Germany, was inspired by the ideas of Hugo Kükelhaus (1900–1984) regarding "fields of experience for the development of the senses" and is intended for use by everyone, regardless of disabilities.[11]
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This sensory garden inside the Rio de Janeiro Botanical Garden, Brazil, is designed to sharpen the senses of touch and smell, and sometimes taste. Visitors with special needs, including the blind and visually impaired, are welcomed by a team of counselors (some of whom are themselves visually disabled). Blindfolded guided tours are also a feature.[12]
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Musical pipes can be played by visitors in the sensory garden at the Building and Construction Authority Gallery, Singapore, which showcases the broad accessibility principles of Universal Design.[13]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "The Blind People's Garden of Bremen". www.lesum.de. Archived from the original on 12 September 2019.
- ^ a b "Sensory garden design advice 1. Sensory Trust". www.sensorytrust.org.uk. 21 February 2003. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
- ^ "Sensory Gardens - Gardening Solutions - University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences". gardeningsolutions.ifas.ufl.edu. Retrieved 2018-03-20.
- ^ Hussein, H (December 2009). "Sensory Garden in Special Schools: The Issues, Design and Use". Journal of Design and Built Environment. 5 (1): 77–95. ISSN 2232-1500. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
- ^ a b Gonzalez MT, Kirkevold M (October 2014). "Benefits of sensory garden and horticultural activities in dementia care: a modified scoping review". Journal of Clinical Nursing. 23 (19–20): 2698–715. doi:10.1111/jocn.12388. PMID 24128125.
- ^ Winterbottom, Daniel; Wagonfeld, Amy (May 19, 2015). Therapeutic Gardens: Design for Healing Spaces. Timber Press. p. 227. ISBN 9781604694420. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
- ^ Worden EC, Moore KA (2004). "Sensory gardens". EDIS (2004, 8). Retrieved 2 December 2020.
- ^ a b Fowler, Susan (2008). Multisensory Rooms and Environments: Controlled Sensory Experiences for People with Profound and Multiple Disabilities. Jessica Kingsley Publishers. p. 39. ISBN 9781846428098. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
- ^ a b Mascarenhas, C (22 August 2017). "First dementia garden in Australia opens". ABC News. Archived from the original on 23 August 2017.
- ^ "Kurpark". www.bad-homburg-tourismus.de. Bad Homburg Tourism. Archived from the original on 11 June 2020.
- ^ Burfeind, Iris. "Hugo Kükelhaus". www.parkdersinne-brv.de (in German). Natur- und Erlebnispark Bremervörde GmbH. Archived from the original on 17 June 2018.
- ^ "Jardim Sensorial de portas abertas — Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro". jbrj.gov.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Governo do Brasil. Archived from the original on 17 June 2018.
- ^ Keung J (2015). "No More Barriers: Promoting Universal Design in Singapore" (PDF). www.clc.gov.sg. Urban Solutions. Issue 6: Active Mobility. The Centre for Liveable Cities, Singapore.