Today’s Solutions: December 09, 2025

Communal gardens, landscaped rooftops, and wide-open windows aren’t features of your typical hospital—but maybe they should be. Khoo Teck Puat Hospital in Singapore is a case study in what can happen when a nature-inspired design is applied to the medical setting to promote healing.

The hospital, which opened its doors in 2010 and now serves 800,000 residents in northern Singapore, has masked the smell of medicine and chemicals with over 700 species of fragrant native plants. In the lobby sounds of machines are drowned out by bird species in the central courtyard. And instead of walking through sterile white hallways, patients, caretakers, and the occasional butterfly navigate the space on outdoor bridges wrapped in greenery.

Beyond the greenery, the public hospital has also become a gathering place for more than just patients and their families. Local residents have been known to stop in to grab a coffee in the food court or read the paper in one of the property’s dozens of gardens. On top of that, Khoo Teck Puat has also added activity centers that anyone can join to do crafts, watch cooking demonstrations, and listen to talks on healthy living.

Now the question is: does all this greenery, natural light, and community actually help people become healthier? While there are no scientific studies to back this up, the hospital says that anecdotally, patients seem to appreciate the hospital’s unique design and are actually willing to pay more to go there than other hospitals in the area.

There’s also a small body of research showing greenery and natural light do aid in recovery. In any case, if you had to recover from illness, wouldn’t you want to heal in a green oasis?

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Decades of protection pay off as endangered whales make a rare comeback in Ca...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a world where news about endangered species is often bleak, a sprawling underwater canyon off the coast ...

Read More

Smelling your own farts might be good for your brain, science says

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM It’s long been the butt of jokes, but the science is catching up: fart gas might actually be ...

Read More

Breaking barriers: Mexican students by border gain affordable access to Calif...

California Governor Gavin Newsom approved legislation allowing low-income Mexican students living near the US border to attend some California community institutions at in-state tuition ...

Read More

Dublin expands car-free zones to improve bus travel and city life

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Dublin is taking further steps to reduce private car traffic in its city centre, with new restrictions set ...

Read More