Can Artificial Intelligence design a beautiful and functional garden? John Valentino puts ChatGPT to the test, comparing its landscape ideas to a real-life design for his new home.

WEBSITE.
🌱https://www.johnandbobs.com

SMART SOIL PRODUCTS.
🪱Blend (combo of top products) https://www.johnandbobs.com/products/blend
🦠Penetrate (beneficial bacteria) https://www.johnandbobs.com/products/penetrate
🌿Nourish-Biosol (organic fertilizer) https://www.johnandbobs.com/products/nourish
🐛 Enviro-Repel 40 (organic pesticide) https://www.johnandbobs.com/products/enviro-repel-40

FREE DOWNLOAD.
⬇️Beginner’s Guide To Soil-Based Gardening https://confirmsubscription.com/h/y/E6502D5E173B1AD8

FOLLOW US.
📘FB https://www.facebook.com/johnandbobs
📸 Insta https://www.instagram.com/johnandbobs
💃TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@johnandbobssoil

CHAPTERS.
00:00 Introduction
00:39 Garden Design 1
03:33 Plant List
06:10 Garden Design 2
08:30 Outdoor Furniture
09:22 Final Thoughts

13 Comments

  1. My problem with chatgpt renditions is it starts over every time. Even if you say, I like X, keep that but makes these changes, it doesn't keep X.

  2. Hi Bob! Thanks for this very helpful. Would you be willing to share your design and what you did for your three different outdoor spaces?

  3. Very interesting. I wouldn't have thought to use AI as a landscape designer, but I can see the benefit. It sounds almost like you are expecting a definitive answer from your first ChatGPT prompt. From my understanding, your initial prompt should be the first step. See how close it comes to what you like, and then say something like 'keep everything the way you designed it, except change ___ to _____. Then keep refining your prompts as ChatGPT refines its answers. I would never expect it to be a final product with just one prompt, or even with several. Just like working with a landscape architect, I would consider its suggestions, provide my own thoughts, and then see what develops.

  4. I noticed that chat GPT emphasizes strict uniformity and minimalist order. That is boring! (There is a term for that, I’m not going to use it here). In terms of creative solutions, one size does not fit all.

  5. I mean, it’s pretty decent to give some inspiration and get the ball rolling, but it still looks pretty gimmicky and cartoonish.
    I’ll have a consultation with Chip instead 🐾🌻

  6. I wonder if the results would be improved if you gave it more information about how you want it to look and feel as well as function requirements. Perhaps if you have suggested a designer that you like and let ChatGPT incorporate that designer's methods into the design. I used ChatGPT to design my garden. It took about 30 volley's back and forth but finally it came up with a very acceptable plan for us.

  7. Wanted to use the GPT to help design a Romanesque Garden but now understand that it is really only a starting point. Great video!

  8. You kept saying, that's "not what I had in mind". To be fair, you could ask 5 top notch landscape designers to design your space and they probably also wouldn't come up with the same thing you were thinking of. Starting from a blank slate can sometimes be hard. Having a way to quickly generate ideas to start with could save time. Also, you should start with all the same constraints of the space that you would use yourself – soil condition, sunlight, etc. Then it will take that into consideration when choosing the plants. Also, tell it to ask you clarifying questions. Behind the scenes it is making assumptions and when you tell it to ask you clarifying questions it's more likely to give you what you're looking for.

Pin