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First it was tiny homes. Now, we have tiny forests.

  • Writer: World Half Full
    World Half Full
  • 4 days ago
  • 3 min read

Updated: 5 hours ago

ENVIRONMENT




You’ve heard of tiny homes. Well, now more Australians are planting out dense, diverse forests on plots of land as small as a tennis court. These tiny forests, scientists say, not only boost biodiversity, they also help reduce urban heat in summer, and run-off and localised flooding during heavy rain and storms.


Also called pocket, micro or Miyawaki forests, the sites planted so far in Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Canberra and many regional towns, including Newcastle and NSW Central Coast, are also proving more resilient to weed infestations than other forms of bush regeneration.


The method was pioneered by Japanese ecologist and botanist Professor Akira Miyawaki in the 1970s, but took off internationally in about 2015 with a project in the Netherlands. It involves preparing a site with soil remediation, studying the original plants that would have grown there and then replicating them from shrub to canopy level. Three to five plants per square metre is the usual planting.


Dr Alex Callen, a restoration ecologist at the University of Newcastle, says scientists were watching the trend closely because it had been unclear how the Miyawaki method would translate to Australian ecosystems and landscapes, especially with rainfall being less predictable.


“Even though the data is pretty young — most tiny forests have only been studied [for] between three and 10 years and that’s not a long time when you think that forests can take hundreds of years to mature — we are seeing very high success rates compared with traditional ecological restoration work,” Callen says. “We’re also seeing very limited weed invasion — and weed invasion in ecological restoration sites in Australia is one of the number one reasons they fail.”


Not-for-profit group Groundswell Collective has established 20 tiny forests since 2023, mostly in NSW — on the Central Coast, in Lake Macquarie and the Hunter region, and Orange in the Central West — and one in the Cook Islands.


The charity Earthwatch has partnered with councils to plant a number of tiny forests in urban areas, including Glenfield and West Pymble in Sydney and Glen Waverley in Melbourne.




Ecologist Dr Grey Coupland has driven the concept of tiny forests in Perth, particularly in the city’s schools, while in Canberra, landscape architect Edwina Robinson has been a key proponent.


There’s a tiny forest in Moorooka in Brisbane. And in Tropical North Queensland, a larger plot of land has been planted according to the method. The Dingo Pocket Miyawaki Forest, which spans 750 square metres, is densely planted with 3000 seedlings from 50 native rainforest plant species.


Callen says there was a lot of evidence about how tiny forests counteracted urban heat because of the cooling effect of more plants in the ground. The research on biodiversity was still emerging, but was promising because the structure of the vegetation mirrored mature forests.


“We know that when we plant densely and when we plant pioneer plants — early colonisers of space — with plants that grow more slowly into canopy, what we’re doing is hastening a forest to maturity,” Callen notes. “That gives it what’s called structural complexity, which means there are more places and spaces and resources for plants and animals to live, and that’s a very good thing.”


Callen says the location of the tiny forests and whether they connect patches of remnant vegetation would also determine biodiversity value.


Anna Noon, founder and director of partnerships and programs at Groundswell Collective, says there were also social benefits, noting, “They connect people to nature, they connect people with each other, they help with wellbeing and resilience and providing hope for the future.”





TOP Before and after: A tiny forest at Teralba Public School, Lake Macquarie, on planting day on May 7, 2024 and (below) on November 8, 2025

PHOTOS smh.com

ABOVE Planting day at Fraser Street Reserve tiny forest in Glen Waverley, Victoria, selected because of its low biodiversity with large unused grassed areas supporting little wildlife

PHOTO Steve Brown/Monash Council

MIDDLE Volunteers planting a tiny forest in December 2025 at Wyong Creek, NSW Central Coast

PHOTOS smh.com

BOTTOM A tiny forest nine months after planting at Cedar Brush Creek, NSW Central Coast

PHOTO Tim Dornaus/Lokale Agenda 21


Even though the data is pretty young — most tiny forests have only been studied [for] between three and 10 years and that’s not a long time when you think that forests can take hundreds of years to mature — we are seeing very high success rates compared with traditional ecological restoration work

Alex Callen


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