Hospital Opens Roof Garden Where Critical Care Patients Can Enjoy the Outdoors for Hours With Full Care
A hospital in London opened a garden on its roof where Critical Care patients can spend hours in the fresh air and sunlight.
Good News Network

A hospital in south London opened a garden on its rooftop where Critical Care patients can spend hours in the fresh air and sunlight.
ICU patients visiting the rooftop garden receive āfull life supportā while experiencing the therapeutic benefits of the natural surroundings.
Located on top of the hospitalās 60-bed critical care unit, Kingās College Hospital says their roof garden has space for up to six beds.
The best part is that each patient can be safely cared-forāwithout being disconnected from essential life-support systems.
Six specially-designed weatherproof cabinets keep the patients close to power, data, and medical gas supplies, just like they would receive on the unit.
The hospitalās team will also be able to research how exposure to fresh air, greenery and sunlight can reduce stress, lower blood pressure, and improve the well-being of patientsāand the families and staff who care for them.
Dr. Tom Best, Clinical Director of Kingās Critical Care, said many of their patients spend weeks or even months receiving intensive careāand research shows that time spent in nature can improve recovery outcomes.
āItās important to treat the whole person and this outdoor critical care unit helps meet our goal of caring for the mind as well as the body,ā he said in a media release.
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Iona Joy, Director of Grants at the Kingās College Hospital Charity, said the gardenāthe first of its kind in the UKāis about dignity, humanity, and innovation.
āWe are transforming intensive care into compassionate careāwhere science, technology, and empathy work together to save and rebuild lives.ā
āWhen youāre stuck inside all day thereās no motivation to try and get back to normal life,ā said Holly, who is waiting for a vital heart operation and spends hours at a time on the outdoor ward.
āEven if it was thunderstorms, Iād be out here,ā she told the BBC. āItās lovely.ā
The garden designers, landscape architect Nigel Dunnettāa professor at the University of Sheffieldāand Sarah Priceāa three-time winner of the Chelsea Flower Showāformed a planting strategy.
Aromatic species, including rosemary, sage, and oregano, were incorporated alongside native species and tactile plants, such as lambās ear, to actively encourage engagement rather than passive observation.
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The low-maintenance garden has become a vital extension of the Kingās Critical Care Centre, which supports over 5,000 patients and 15,000 loved ones each year.
As part of the research for the department, the Critical Care team will study patientsā long-term outcomes, with an additional focus on how families and staff benefit from using the space, particularly in managing stress levels.
Professor Clive Kay, Chief Executive of Kingās College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, says the roof garden is dedicated to those with serious and life-threatening conditions.
āItās been built with purpose and guided by the needs of patients and their familiesāand reflects a deep commitment to dignity, support, and hope.ā
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Saturday, June 27, 2026