Events
industry charity Meetings Industry Meeting Needs funded a unique sensory garden
for people with dementia at the Alzheimer’s Disease International (ADI)
conference in London’s ExCel Centre.
The £5,000
project is the result of joint working with environmental charity Groundwork,
Alzheimer’s Disease International and Alzheimer’s Society, who hosted the
conference. The sensory garden was designed by Groundwork’s landscape
architects to stimulate all five senses with different textures, scents, bold
colours, and plants that can be grown for cooking and has been donated to form
the centrepiece of new tranquil community space being created on a ‘brown
field site’ in Newham, London.
Jeremy
Hughes, Chief Executive of the Alzheimer’s Society said: “We are very grateful
to MIMN and Groundwork London for putting together this wonderful garden, a
real talking point as well as well as a calming space for all the delegates."
MIMN paid for the decking, planters, pots, turf, shingle and
compost, and staff time designing, building, breakdown and re-location was
provided free by Groundwork London.
Peter Rand MBE, Executive Committee member of Meeting Needs,
said: “MIMN is delighted to have sponsored this garden for the Alzheimer’s
Disease International conference, providing an area of tranquility for
delegates with dementia. We appreciate the opportunity and we are particularly
glad that the garden will be relocated after the conference to provide a
lasting benefit to those residents in a sheltered housing project in Newham."
The garden
was built by trainees on the Newham Green Team, a joint venture between
Groundwork London and Serco to provide supportive, practical and real
experience training opportunities for the long term unemployed, people.
Pictured: (L-R back to front): Roy Churchman, Ed Weir, Andrew
Ketteringham, Alzheimer’s Society strategic advisor; Sue O’Gorman, MIMN
Honorary Secretary; Carl Suratan, Jacob Ray, David Beaman, Ben Stanley, MCI
Project Manager; Stephen Dunn, Grace Carney