• Home
  • Why Greenstone
    • Sustainability
    • Sensory gardens
    • Health & Well-being
    • About us >
      • Corporate Profile
      • Director's Bio
  • Services
    • Gardens for health & well-being >
      • Active Ageing
      • Social and therapeutic horticulture
      • Sensory gardens
      • Healing gardens
    • Commercial / public space >
      • Urban design >
        • Air quality
      • Resort
      • Community gardens
    • Educators >
      • Outdoor Learning >
        • case study - learning outside the classroom
      • Special needs sensory gardens >
        • Resources / Downloads
      • School playgrounds >
        • Funding school grounds development projects >
          • Fees
      • Priority School Building Programme
      • INSET day and CPD training
      • Survey
    • Play area design >
      • Natural Play
      • Inclusive play area design
      • Sustainable playgrounds
    • Residential >
      • Planting plans
      • Edible gardens & orchard design
    • CPD for local authorities and architects
  • Gallery
    • Dementia sensory gardens
    • International School grounds design - AAS Moscow
    • Natural play in Early Years - North Islington
    • Sensory play gardens - Hickory House
    • Special needs schools - sensory play
    • Sensory gardens for mental health - residential care village Norwood
    • Stressed execs - residential sensory gardens
    • Outdoor classrooms and community gardens
    • Eco resorts - Portugal, Malaysia
  • News
    • Community projects
  • Links
  • Publications I Press
    • Reviews
Greenstone Design UK - Sustainable landscape architecture + design
         About us | Contact us | Our Blog |  Follow us on facebook

Community care, mental health and chickens!

29/6/2014

0 Comments

 
natural play for mental health
This morning I was talking with a doctor about community care, mental health and the government's preference to keep people in the community for as long as possible. I remarked that community care schemes only work if the community actually cares. The classic question "who gives a toss?" is important. If we are to value something or someone we have to know about them in the first place. Just as the environmental movement needs us to know what grass feels like under our bare feet, and what birdsong sounds like, so too we need to know our neighbours. Knowing them is the first step to valuing them. Only then can we begin to care enough so that their welfare is of interest to us. In short we need resilient communities. 

Urban design for health and well-being relies to a large part on creating spaces that foster a shared sense of community - natural playgrounds, community gardens, healing gardens and sensory gardens work to bring people together because they are, necessarily, inclusive, accessible public spaces.

We then went out into the garden and checked on the new chickens , because even busy doctors, and perhaps especially busy doctors, need nature connections in their lives too...

Chickens for mental health
Chickens have been shown to prompt speech in non-verbal children on the autistic spectrum. What else can they do to reduce stress in a community garden setting?
0 Comments

Why playing outdoors makes children smarter

17/3/2014

3 Comments

 
Picture
Reposted from Portland Family Magazine.
Author and clinical psychologist Kay Redfield Jamison writes, “Children need the freedom and time to play. Play is not a luxury. Play is a necessity.” It is through unstructured, open-ended creative play that children learn the ways of the world. While playing outside, children explore with all their senses, they witness new life, they create imaginary worlds and they negotiate with each other to create a playful environment.

  1. Outdoor play is a multi-sensory activity. While outdoors, children will see, hear, smell and touch things unavailable to them when they play inside. They use their brains in unique ways as they come to understand these new stimuli.
  2. Playing outside brings together informal play and formal learning. Children can incorporate concepts they have learned at school in a hands-on way while outdoors. For example, seeing and touching the roots of a tree will bring to life the lesson their teacher taught about how plants get their nutrients.
  3. Playing outdoors stimulates creativity. Robin Moore, an expert in the design of play and learning environments, says, “Natural spaces and materials stimulate children’s limitless imagination and serve as the medium of inventiveness and creativity.” Rocks, stones and dirt present limitless opportunities for play that can be expressed differently every time a child steps outside.
  4. Playing outdoors is open-ended. There is no instruction manual for outdoor play. Children make the rules and in doing so use their imagination, creativity, intelligence and negotiation skills in a unique way.
  5. Playing in nature reduces anxiety. Time spent outside physiologically reduces anxiety. Children bring an open mind and a more relaxed outlook back inside when they are in more traditional learning environments.
  6. Outdoor play increases attention span. Time spent in unstructured play outdoors is a natural attention builder. Often children who have difficulty with pen and paper tasks or sitting still for long periods of times are significantly more successful after time spent outside.
  7. Outdoor play is imaginative. Because there are no labels, no pre-conceived ideas and no rules, children must create the world around them. In this type of play, children use their imagination in ways they don’t when playing inside.
  8. Being in nature develops respect for other living things. Children develop empathy, the ability to consider other people’s feeling, by interacting with creatures in nature. Watching a tiny bug, a blue bird or a squirrel scurrying up a tree gives children the ability to learn and grow from others.
  9. Outdoor play promotes problem solving. As children navigate a world in which they make the rules, they must learn to understand what works and what doesn’t, what lines of thinking bring success and failure, how to know when to keep trying and when to stop.
  10. Playing outside promotes leadership skills. In an environment where children create the fun, natural leaders will arise. One child may excel at explaining how to play the game, while another may enjoy setting up the physical challenge of an outdoor obstacle course. All types of leadership skills are needed and encouraged.
  11. Outdoor play widens vocabulary. While playing outdoors, children may see an acorn, a chipmunk and cumulous clouds. As they encounter new things, their vocabulary will expand in ways it never could indoors.
  12. Playing outside improves listening skills. As children negotiate the rules of an invented game, they must listen closely to one another, ask questions for clarification and attend to the details of explanations in ways they don’t have to when playing familiar games.
  13. Being in nature improves communication skills. Unclear about the rules in an invented game? Not sure how to climb the tree or create the fairy house? Children must learn to question and clarify for understanding while simultaneously making themselves understood.
  14. Outdoor play encourages cooperative play. In a setting where there aren’t clear winners and losers, children work together to meet a goal. Perhaps they complete a self-made obstacle course or create a house for a chipmunk. Together they compromise and work together to meet a desired outcome.
  15. Time in nature helps children to notice patterns. The natural world is full of patterns. The petals on flowers, the veins of a leaf, the bark on a tree are all patterns. Pattern building is a crucial early math skill.
  16. Playing outdoors helps children to notice similarities and differences. The ability to sort items and notice the similarities and differences in them is yet another skill crucial to mathematical success. Time outdoors affords many opportunities for sorting.
  17. Time spent outdoors improves children’s immune systems. Healthy children are stronger learners. As children spend more and more time outdoors, their immune systems improve, decreasing time out of school for illness.
  18. Outdoor play increases children’s physical activity level. Children who play outdoors are less likely to be obese and more likely to be active learners. Children who move and play when out of school are ready for the attention often needed for classroom learning.
  19. Time spent outdoors increases persistence. Outdoor games often require persistence. Children must try and try again if their experiment fails. If the branch doesn’t reach all the way across the stream or the bark doesn’t cover their fairy house, they must keep trying until they are successful.
  20. Outdoor play is fun. Children who are happy are successful learners. Children are naturally happy when they are moving, playing and creating outside. This joy opens them up for experimenting, learning and growing.

3 Comments

Urban forests - what does it take to turn a park into a place for health and well-being?

16/7/2013

2 Comments

 
Forest bathing in an urban forest, bio philic city, Wellington, NZ"Forest bathing", or time spent forest walking for health and well-being in a biophilic city, Wellington, New Zealand
Forest bathing or Shinrin-yoku refers to time spent walking in forests. In Japan the practice has been studied by forestry, agriculture and health officials. The rest of the world is now catching on to the idea that rather than being a nice-to-have feature, urban forests are vital to balance the health effects of modern life.

In the UK some cities are blessed with urban parks with mature trees. However, some communities lack mature trees, some have decided to remove tall trees due to various pressures, some people like visiting forests but don't feel the need to have them near their home. Perhaps that situation is about to change.

We know that an active lifestyle is necessary for health and well-being. 20-30 minutes walking 5 times per week maintains our mental alertness, blood pressure, body fat ratio and overall stress levels (a leading cause of cancers) at manageable levels. New findings have discovered that walking in forests is even better for us than just going to the gym or taking a stroll down a local pathway. 

Walking in forests (shinrin-yoku) may prevent the onset of chronic illnesses like cancers, reduce blood pressure, heart rate and stress hormones (which may have a preventive effect on hypertension).  It is also credited with creating calming psychological effects through changes observed in parasympathetic and sympathetic nerves. 

Forest bathing appears to increase the level of serum adiponectin--a hormone that in lower concentrations is associated with obesity, type 2 DM (diabetes mellitus), cardiovascular disease, and metabolic syndrome, among other metabolic disorders. A combined study found shinrin-yoku reduces anxiety, depression, anger, fatigue and feelings of emotional confusion.

By developing urban forests we create an oasis in the city, somewhere we can actively balance the indoor air pollution of modern buildings, the information overload and the stress and pressures of the modern world. Sustainable urban planning requires us to include more trees in the urban setting. To mitigate climate change we need more long-lived trees to sequester carbon. Rather than being a nice-to-have feature, urban forests are vital for a cost effective public health system.

Read the full article here


2 Comments

    Author

    Gayle Souter-Brown founded Greenstone Design in UK in 2006, serving Europe, Africa, Asia, South and North America. Since 2012 the expanding team is delighted to offer the same salutogenic landscape architecture + design practice also from NZ, giving a truly global reach. 

    Archives

    June 2018
    June 2014
    March 2014
    July 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    May 2012

    Categories

    All
    Active Lifestyles
    Children's Gardens
    Climate Change
    Depression
    Disabled Children
    Eco Friendly Building
    Eco Towns
    Forest Bathing
    Garden Design
    Garden For The Blind
    Green Cities
    Green Deal
    Green Living
    Health Care
    Healthcare Garden
    Healthcare Gardens
    Landscape Architect
    Landscape Design
    Mental Health
    Natural Play
    Nature Cures For Cancer
    Nature Cures For Stress
    Occupational Therapy
    Outdoor Play
    Playing Outdoors
    Playing Outside
    Retrofitting
    Sensory Gardens
    Shinrin-yoku
    Social Housing
    Stress
    Stroke Rehab
    Stroke Victims
    Sustainablity
    Unstructured Play
    Urban Design
    Urban Forests
    Urban Planning
    Well Being
    Wellness Garden Design

    RSS Feed

Disclaimer | Privacy | Copyright Information
Why Greenstone
  • Sustainability
  • Sensory Gardens
  • Health and Well-being


About us


Contact us
Services
  • Residential
          > edible gardens 
          > planting plans
  • Commercial/Public Spaces
          > resorts
          > community gardens
          > gardens for health
          > urban design
          > air quality
  • Play area design
          > natural play
          > inclusive play
          > sustainable playgrounds
  • Educators
          > outdoor learning
          > special needs
          > school grounds design
          >
inset day & CPD training 
  • CPD for local authorities

  • Care homes / rehab gardens
           > social & therapeutic
           > sensory gardens

           > wellness gardens 


News and events
  • award winning design
  • community projects
Links



Resources



Greenstone Design UK Ltd is registered in England & Wales No.06944998.
Registered Office: Alderbrook, Abinger Hammer, Surrey RH5 6SA UK. 
VAT registration No 976 3017 05


Corporate Social Responsibility | Diversity & Equality | Environmental Policy
Quality Management Statement 

© Greenstone Design UK Limited 2001-2020 All rights Reserved
Based on the Surrey-Hampshire border we work locally, nationally and internationally to advise and design gardens for health and well-being