It features a curved bench, steel-meshed umbrella sculptures, and a winding pathway with plants chosen for their calming effect.

Prof Jones said the garden “offers a quiet place for reflection and escape, and it celebrates both the incredible diversity of plant life and the unique strengths of neurodivergent minds”.

Originally exhibited at the 2025 RHS Chelsea Flower Show, where it earned a Silver-Gilt Medal, it is now a permanent fixture at the university campus.

Designer Katy Terry said the garden was inspired by her own ADHD diagnosis.

“It’s been enlightening to discover and explore how my mind, like many others, works differently,” she said.

“I hope this space provides neurodiverse individuals with a moment of calm and the freedom to be themselves.”

She said the university space was “the perfect legacy location” and would “serve students and visitors with a pocket of peace”.

Dr Lindsey Roberts, acting CEO of the ADHD Foundation, said: “We’re proud to share this garden with the University of Liverpool and the wider community, which reflects the diversity of both plants and people, encouraging the public to embrace difference as something vital and beautiful.”