While the healing garden is a preceding concept, it is being revived in modern societies because of the comprehensive therapeutic benefits such places can offer. These benefits have high implication for hospital staff and students who are at a critical stage of development of their bodies and minds. In similar finding conclude the research by English et al. [46] where they suggest a strong interplay between emotions and place such that emotional geographies, which appear to be embedded within places of healing, play an important role in shaping and maintaining therapeutic landscapes.