The garden was built by civil engineering contractor William Pye. 12 volunteers from the NHS Property Services Delivery team helped plant it up, with flowers including anemones, hellebores and viburnum. One volunteer commented that, “the weather’s been miserable, but we’ve still had a great laugh planting up the garden!” The plants in the garden are low maintenance, to fit in with the NHS workers’ busy schedules. They are also tolerant of wet soil, to take into account Manchester’s rainy climate.
Lauren Ridgard, Estates Delivery Partner, NHS Property Services, says:
“We’ve transformed what was a huge empty green area into this amazing garden that can be used by our customers, patients and also my team.”
Birdwatching and herbal tea
The RHS Community Outreach team will run monthly workshops in the new space. These will comprise different seasonal activities such as birdwatching, solstice sun prints and making herbal tea. There will also be mindfulness workshops, focussing on the ‘Take Notice’ part of the New Economics Foundation’s Five Ways to Wellbeing.
The Walkden Clinic Wellbeing Garden is one of six gardens being built around England in collaboration with NHS Property Services. Service users have been involved with the designs to ensure the gardens address each site’s individual needs.
Funded by NHS Property Services as part of their Corporate Social Responsibility programme, the gardens aim to improve the biodiversity of community-based healthcare centres, while also creating outdoor spaces suitable for green social prescribing and other therapeutic treatment. This programme is funded separately from funding used for frontline care.
If you would like to fund future NHS gardens for wellbeing, make a donation today.