An Enclosed Healing Garden in Your Courtyard
Courtyards naturally create the sheltered, intimate spaces that therapeutic gardens need — the walls become a hug from the built environment.
Why it works
Courtyards are inherently therapeutic spaces — the enclosure creates psychological safety, walls shelter from wind and noise, and the contained scale makes every sensory element more intense. Hospital healing gardens, monastery cloister gardens, and spa courtyards all exploit this enclosed-yet-open quality. A therapeutic courtyard concentrates scent (jasmine is more fragrant in an enclosed space), amplifies water sounds (reflected off walls), and creates a private sanctuary divorced from the outside world.
How to achieve this look
Center the courtyard on a water feature — a wall-mounted spout into a stone basin provides constant, calming sound. Surround with fragrant climbers on walls: jasmine, roses, honeysuckle. Plant raised beds with textured, aromatic species: lavender, rosemary, sage, lamb's ear. Include a comfortable bench with back support facing the water feature. Use warm natural materials: stone paving, wood seating, natural gravel. Add soft lighting (warm-toned LED uplights and string lights) for evening use. Keep the design simple — visual clutter is the enemy of therapeutic spaces.
Arden helps you design a courtyard specifically for healing and relaxation. Preview how water features, fragrant plantings, and comfortable seating transform your enclosed space into a personal wellness retreat.
"I redesigned my entire backyard before buying a single plant. Saved me from so many mistakes."
-- Sarah M.
Perguntas Frequentes
Q1 What water feature works best in a therapeutic courtyard?
A gentle, constant flow: a wall-mounted spout, a bubbling urn, or a recirculating stone basin. Avoid loud cascades or splashy fountains — the sound should be calming and consistent, not attention-grabbing.
Q2 Can a therapeutic courtyard be low-maintenance?
Yes. Choose evergreen, self-maintaining plants (rosemary, lavender, jasmine, ferns). A simple water feature with a recirculating pump needs only occasional cleaning. Gravel surfaces eliminate weeding. The whole space can maintain itself with monthly attention.
Q3 What colors are most therapeutic in a garden?
Green and blue are consistently rated as the most calming colors. White adds light and serenity. Avoid large blocks of hot colors (red, orange) in therapeutic spaces — use them sparingly as accents if at all.