Bianca van der Stoel

Written by: 

Participatory Community Design in Therapeutic Gardens & Landscapes

Kiwanis therapeutic garden

Research continues to affirm what you like already sense intuitively: therapeutic gardens work best when the people who will use them help shape them.

A recent paper, From Yard to Healing Garden: The Role of Participatory Design in Shaping Therapeutic Landscapes (Saavedra & Covarrubias, 2026), highlights a clear pattern. When direct users are meaningfully included in the design process, gardens are more closely aligned with real needs. These spaces are used more often, perceived as more therapeutic, and foster a stronger sense of ownership and belonging. In contrast, gardens designed primarily through institutional or staff perspectives often fall short, resulting in underuse or limited therapeutic impact.

Put simply, when participants are not meaningfully involved in the design process, the spaces are less effective, and so is our work as professionals.

A Kiwanis Village Example

This research mirrors my own experience facilitating the community-led design process for the therapeutic garden design at Kiwanis Village in Nanaimo, BC. Rather than beginning with a predetermined design, we led with a 3 part series of participatory sessions to gather input directly from residents.

One of those sessions was intentionally simple and low-barrier: a post-it note exercise built around three questions:

  • What do you want to see in this garden?
  • What do you want to do in this garden?
  • What do you want to feel in this garden?

These prompts invited both practical and emotional responses, everything from requests for specific plants and seating to emotions folks hoped to feel in this space. The results directly informed layout decisions, plant selection, and more. The most surprising piece, that I found, from these workshops is that I would’ve thought participants wanted food growing opportunities- like raised beds or fruit trees- and that was NOT the case. I distinctly remember one person sharing, “I don’t want to enter this space and see work.” Instead, it became clear people wanted a space for reflection or pause, and they wanted to see pollinators and birds, and they wanted a space that felt immersive. That led us to choosing different heights in plants, and structuring seating in particular places.

Carrying Participatory Design Forward: Evanmore Acres

Participatory design continues to be a central part of my current work as we apply for grants and move toward finalizing the therapeutic garden at Evanmorr Acres, a farm supporting individuals living with diverse abilities through the Nanaimo Association for Community Living.

In this context, participation looks different. I work alongside some incredible individuals who are non-verbal, which means a written post-it note approach isn’t an accessible fit. So, the methods need to shift.

For this project, we’re planning to use:

  • Photo walls with sticker voting
    Participants can place stickers on images representing garden elements, activities, or sensory experiences they’re drawn to, offering clear, visual preference data without requiring verbal or written language.
  • Object-based choice making
    Using physical materials (tools, textures, seed packets, natural objects) laid out on a table, participants can indicate interest through touch, selection, or repeated engagement. Observing what people return to, or avoid, provides meaningful design insight.

These approaches honour different communication styles while still centering the lived experience of future garden users.

Additional Participatory Workshop Strategies

There isn’t one ‘correct’ method for leading participatory design feedback sessions. In reality, strong participatory design is responsive, creative, and often iterative. The question isn’t “How do we get feedback?” but rather “How do people already express preference, comfort, curiosity, or agency, and how can design listen to that?”

Depending on the population, setting, and project phase, other participatory strategies might include:

  • Guided walk-and-talks
    Walking through an existing site and inviting real-time reactions to light, sound, access, and comfort.
  • Collage or vision-board sessions
    Using images, colours, textures, and words to express desired mood and identity rather than specific features.
  • Scaled models or mapping
    Allowing participants to move miniature objects on a base map to explore layout ideas.
  • Story-based prompts
    Asking participants to describe a “good day in the garden” or “a place they feel most at ease,” then translating themes into design elements.
  • Care partner and staff reflection circles
    When appropriate, pairing direct participant input with reflections from those who know their communication styles well.

Designing With, Not For

Participatory community design asks us to loosen control and design and move with the participants. And the payoff is substantial: gardens that are used, loved, respected, and genuinely therapeutic.

As both research and practice continue to show, the most healing landscapes can’t be designed for. The most healing spaces are grown, collaboratively, thoughtfully, and in relationship with the people who will call them their own.

Pin It

Bianca van der Stoel

Written by:

Read It

Research continues to affirm what you like already sense intuitively: therapeutic gardens work best when the people who will use them help shape them. A recent paper, From Yard to Healing Garden: The Role of Participatory Design in Shaping Therapeutic Landscapes (Saavedra & Covarrubias, 2026), highlights a clear pattern. When direct users are meaningfully included […]

Kiwanis therapeutic garden

Read It

If you’ve ever felt your shoulders drop after putting your hands in soil, or noticed how a few minutes of watering plants can quiet a racing mind, you already know something about why horticultural therapy (HT) works. But when we’re trying to explain this work to others, or convince organizations and funders that it’s worth […]

Sunflower

Read It

My horticultural interests (even before I found HT) have always pulled me toward herbs more than any other plant group. There’s something about their immediacy, their generosity, and their sensory richness that keeps me coming back. If I’m planning a new program or walking through a garden deciding what to bring into a session, herbs […]

Img 4883 (3)

Read It

When people start thinking about horticultural therapy (HT) contracts, the focus often jumps straight to logistics: Where can I work? Who might hire me? What should I charge? Those are important questions, and ones that this blog can’t really even begin to answer, but in my experience, they land much better after you’ve spent time […]

Benchcropped

Read It

Explore a collection of winter HT program ideas to support connection, creativity, and goal-driven horticultural therapy practice.

66b3dc7e 85ce 44a3 aa83 8b8b499da506 (1)

Read It

For a field that uses the words therapist and therapy, documentation is an essential aspect of professional practice. And yet, it’s one of the areas many practitioners feel the least confident in, or the most pressed for time with. I absolutely relate to that. Documentation can feel intimidating, or like something that happens after the […]

Laptop working
 ALFRED AUSTIN
The glory of gardening: hands in the dirt, head in the sun, heart with nature. To nurture a garden is to feed not just the body, but the soul.