This program is about the power of gardens to heal in a variety of contexts, including several medical facilities and a memorial to the tragedy of September 11, 2001. Featured are a garden for AIDs patients, a rehabilitation garden for children with neurological and orthopedic problems, a garden addressing the needs of those suffering from Alzheimer's and a series of memorial groves serving to heal the psychological trauma of the events of 9/11. The viewer experiences in vivid detail how such restorative gardens are an integral part of the practice of medicine through their capacity to relieve the stress of patients, their families, and medical staff. The viewer also observes how these gardens overcome the passivity and the boredom of confinement and promote a strong sense of community and empowerment aiding the effectiveness of medical treatment. In addition, the program depicts how such restorative landscapes can serve to heal individuals in contexts other than medical facilities by serving as commemorative landscapes to assuage grief.
The episode features landscape architect David Kamp, who discusses with GardenStory host Rebecca Frischkorn the design features of the various gardens, three of which are his own creations. Patients and medical staff also attest to the extraordinary therapeutic powers of these gardens.