Sponsors

The positive impact of getting landscaping right

Mark Stefan, director of landscape architecture and planning practice, Design with Nature, outlines the principal characteristics of the Contemplative Landscape Model which forms the core of the book, Neuroscience for Designing Green Spaces

Mark Stefan, director of landscape architecture and planning practice, Design with Nature, outlines the principal characteristics of each of the component parts of the Contemplative Landscape Model (CLM) which forms the core of the book, Neuroscience for Designing Green Spaces, by Agnieszka Olszewska-Guizzo, published in May 2023. He examines the relevance of each element, and discusses each’s application in relation to the design of therapeutic landscapes and external spaces associated with the various types of mental healthcare facilities.

The COVID-19 lockdown experience shared by us all highlighted the benefits of an increased level of contact with the natural world – something which was enveloped, at least in the early days, by relative peace and serenity. We all have our own individual preferences in relation to which type of semi-natural and man-made landscapes we find appealing, based on cultural exposure and personal predilections. However, landscape architect and neuroscience researcher, Agnieszka Olszewska-Guizzo, has undertaken in her book to identify the principal elements of a contemplative landscape, to provide fellow professionals with the tools they need when seeking to maximise the potential mental health benefits of existing and new green spaces

She references the fact that for the vast majority of the last 10,000 years, homosapiens has lived in close proximity to nature, and so arguably mental health impacts are one of the principal costs of the relatively recent adaptation to the densely populated, sensory overloaded, urbanised environments in which the majority of people now reside. She quotes a study involving 900,000 participants (ranging from adolescents to adults) carried out by Engemann et al in 2019 that ‘showed that the relative risk of developing any psychiatric disorder (borderline type, personality disorder, eating disorders, obsessive compulsive disorder, neurotic and stress-related disorder, depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, mood disorder, schizophrenia, and substance abuse) was higher among those that grew up further away from green spaces’

Log in or register FREE to read the rest

This story is Premium Content and is only available to registered users. Please log in at the top of the page to view the full text. If you don't already have an account, please register with us completely free of charge.

Latest Issue