When the Weather Outside is Frightful: Interior Healing Gardens


For those of us not in Florida or Phoenix, this time of year doesn’t allow for as much interaction with nature, especially if we are in a wheelchair or just not so sure of foot. Many healthcare facilities (and many corporate offices, too) offer indoor gardens, atria, or greenhouses for those months when going outside is not an appealing or safe option. Bronson Methodist Hospital in Kalamazoo, MI (above) is one of the healthcare facilities featured in this article: http://www.planterra.com/research/article_therapeutic.php


“The tree which fills the arms grew from the tiniest sprout…the journey of a thousand miles commenced with a single step.” (Lao Tzu)

Education in Healthcare Design

Many people email us asking us about educational opportunities in the field of landscape architecture and healthcare design. Here is the beginning of a list:

Certificate Programs

1. Chicago Botanic Garden Healthcare Garden Design Certificate of Merit Program
www.chicagobotanic.org/certificate/hgd
Chicago Botanic Garden Glencoe, IL
8 day program, March 26 – April 2, 2008
Potential students may also enroll for the first day only, meant to be a one-day seminar for participants to receive an introduction to Healthcare Garden Design on March 26.

Contact: Amelia Simmons-Hurt Manager, Certificate Programs
Ph: 847.835.8293
Fax: 847.835.6865
email: school
@chicagobotanic.org

Chicago Public Radio recently did a program on the course: http://ww.chicagopublicradio.org/content.aspx?audioID=14097 Coming from Public Health/

2. University of Washington Extension Certificate Program in Therapeutic Gardens http://www.extension.washington.edu/ext/certificates/thg/thg_gen.asp
Next program begins Fall 2008


Landscape Architecture Programs (for BLA, MLA, or PhD)

1. Texas A & M University Certificate in Health Systems and Design
http://archone.tamu.edu/chsd/
Texas A & M University, College of Architecture, 3137 TAMU College Station, TX 77843-3137

This is probably the most comprehensive program in the country at this time, with a strong focus on empirical research and evidence-based design.

2. Michigan State University, Department of Landscape Architecture, MLA degree specialty in Therapeutic Site Design
http://www.spdc.msu.edu/la/
The degree is a Masters in Environmental Design
with a Specialty in Therapeutic Site Design. It is intended to be a second professional degree program, but second professional degree is widely interpreted to include individuals from the medical arts as well as design/planning.

Faculty member Dr. Joanne Westphal is also offering a 2 credit lecture, 1 credit studio course in Therapeutic Site Design this winter. It is intended that students not on the MSU campus will be able to take the course, on-line.

3. Professor Emeritus Clare Cooper Marcus has been teaching a class at the College of Environmental Design, University of California, Berkeley
.

4. Colorado State University has an undergraduate program in Landscape Architecture, and has recently added a degree program in Horticultural Therapy which will begin this fall. This offers an excellent combination for students who may be interested both in design and HT (see below for more on HT).

5. The University of Washington, with Landscape Architecture Professor Daniel Winterbottom as a tireless advocate, often offers studios, including design/build, with a focus on therapeutic gardens. Several projects, including Cancer Lifeline, Incarnation Children’s Center, Pete Gross House, and the University of Washington Medical Center Healing Garden can be viewed on the UW LA program’s website: http://www.caup.washington.edu/larch/Programs/design_build/db_goals.php. Several more projects, including Bedford Hills Prison and Guatemala, will be added soon.


Other avenues:

  • The Landscape and Human Health Laboratory (LHHL) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign “a multidisciplinary research laboratory dedicated to studying the connection between greenery and human health: http://www.lhhl.uiuc.edu/


Horticultural Therapy:

  • The American Horticultural Therapy Association has links to numerous universities and institutions that offer training in horticultural therapy, many of which may be useful from a design perspective: http://www.ahta.org/education/colleges.cfm
  • Temple University is currently offering three courses on Horticultural Therapy in preparation for the AHTA Certificate Program.
  • Rutgers University and the University of Maine also offer undergraduate programs.
  • Kansas State offers undergraduate and graduate programs in HT, and possibly a correspondence course.
  • Colorado State


Healing Gardens = Happy Employees, too


A less frequently publicized benefit of healing gardens in healthcare facilities is a lower staff turnover rate. Healing gardens are being used to draw and to keep good employees.

Exempla Good Samaritan Hospital in Lafayette, CO is advertising for jobs on Cross Country Travel Corps, http://www.crosscountrytravcorps.com/cctc/jobs/facility_showcases/exempla.jsp, and just look at how many of their points emphasize outdoor space at their facility:

Exempla Good Samaritan Hospital is a 477,000-foot facility situated on 77 acres. This 172-bed hospital (with potential to expand to 350 beds as the community grows) features:

  • Spacious private patient rooms
  • State-of-the-art equipment
  • Mountain and garden views
  • Walking trails
  • Incorporation of natural landscaping to capture the essence of Colorado
  • A central healing garden
  • Soothing water features and colorful flowers
  • Room Service
  • Integrative Care (aromatheraphy, acupuncture, massage therapy)

Welcome to the Therapeutic Landscapes Database Blog

Welcome to the Therapeutic Landscapes Database Blog (TLDB).

This blog is a companion to the Therapeutic Landscapes Database website, an online bibliography of information about landscapes that promote and facilitate health. The TLD serves as a virtual bibliography of published references, built landscapes, designers and consultants, links, and related information.

The TLDBlog serves two important functions:

  1. Rapid posting of new information (upcoming conferences, recently published articles and books, etc.);
  2. Acts as a virtual meetingplace for landscape designers, healthcare providers, and other interested people to exchange thoughts, ideas, and knowledge.

Both website and blog are operated through the Therapeutic Landscapes Resource Center, Inc. , a non-profit organization founded by Naomi Sachs, ASLA.