The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

A place where we all can grow

A new community-led project shows how design can change lives for the better, writes V&A Dundee’s Peter Nurick

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What does design mean to you? And would you consider yourself a designer? I’m very proud to have spent more than a year working with local Dundee communitie­s to create a new garden in the centre of the waterfront, and to give people the opportunit­y to become designers.

Our Community Garden sits in one corner of Slessor Gardens, the wonderful new green space that has transforme­d the waterfront and brought life and activity into that part of the city well before V&A Dundee opens next year.

From the start, we wanted to use the garden space made available by Dundee City Council to have a positive impact. Gardening is a great way to think about design, as it involves collecting ideas, testing them out with friends or family, and then turning your design into a physical space to be enjoyed and shared with others.

Gardens can also be very calm, safe spaces and many people find the process of gardening helpful for relieving stress and improving their state of mind.

Working with design studio kennedytwa­ddle, designer and lecturer Linsey McIntosh and landscape architect Glen MacFarlane, we planned a series of workshops to enable a group of individual­s from across the city to design – from scratch – the V&A Dundee Community Garden, with sessions in the Botanic Garden and Duncan of Jordanston­e College of Art and Design.

We made clear from the start that we wanted to jointly create a world-class public space for people to enjoy and spend time in, a garden created by the city and for the city.

Our volunteers included people living with – and recovering from – a range of health and wellbeing issues, as it was crucial to have their input to create a community space that worked well. We also worked with Art Angel, a wonderful organisati­on which uses design, creativity and art to support people living with mental health difficulti­es in Dundee.

The impact of the project has been incredible, well before we open the garden to the public later this year. Participan­ts have improved their self-confidence, gained new skills and created a new support network.

Members of our community design team were also invited to meet the Queen when she officially opened Slessor Gardens last summer.

The sense of ownership felt by the whole team over this project is exactly how we want people to feel about V&A Dundee – this is a museum for the people of Dundee and Scotland, and as well as the incredible exhibition­s and galleries we will want everyone to come and get involved. From drop-in family sessions to after-hours performanc­es, the new museum will be buzzing with creative opportunit­ies for people of all ages.

Our architect Kengo Kuma describes V&A Dundee as a “living room for the city”, a space for people to feel comfortabl­e, somewhere that is theirs to relax in as they share special moments with friends and family, but also a place where they can be active and creative.

And if the museum is a living room, we are already building the garden. Work on the constructi­on started recently, with the experts at Careys kindly offering to do the garden’s groundwork and hard landscapin­g, and the whole project could not have happened without the generous support of players of the People’s Postcode Lottery.

We’re now looking for more volunteers to help plant the garden this summer, and I’d love to hear from anyone interested in taking part, whatever your age or level of physical activity. The garden will be a place for everyone, so it’s important that everyone can help to create it too.

 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: the Queen at the opening of Slessor Gardens; a card awaits a suggestion; Stephanie Kerr from the People’s Postcode Lottery, Paddy Duffy from the V&A Dundee and Derek Cassie from the V&A Community Garden; and another idea takes root.
Clockwise from top: the Queen at the opening of Slessor Gardens; a card awaits a suggestion; Stephanie Kerr from the People’s Postcode Lottery, Paddy Duffy from the V&A Dundee and Derek Cassie from the V&A Community Garden; and another idea takes root.
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