The house that the young women live in is two houses knocked into one and has a large back garden. Sybil “thought it was an important part of any kind of project to house people, to have a garden that people could go and sit in, so she would always involve the residents in gardening, and she would have volunteers from the local community in Brockley, who would also help with cultivating the garden, sowing different kinds of flowers, taking care of them.” It has a water feature, large greenhouse and “there’s a banana tree actually in that garden and more palms. So, she just wanted to make again, a kind of good sculptural space that people could relax in.”
Woodrow thinks that it’s because of this mother’s connection to Guyana that she likes to grow certain plants – “because they remind her of where she came from”. Woodrow is personally interested in the work of Roberto Burle Marx, a Brazilian garden designer, who was active in the 1960s-80s. He was known for creating natural and manmade environments using concrete as well as rock and stone and had a strong use of colour. He used geometric designs and the painted boardwalk in Rio Janeiro was one of his projects. Woodrow finds these gardens interesting “because they’re kind of like taking the idea, the Guyanese idea of using concrete and using stone, and using paint to make things lovely. But he’ll do it in a slightly more kind of abstract geometric kind of way.”