I really wanted to love this book. As an experienced gardener, I was really interested in the concept of a smart garden and was intrigued by the colour photos of their construction. However, this book is mostly actually about other things. The first 2/3rds if this book is actually an in-depth look on *why* you should garden (such as pesticides, reducing your impact, nutrition, reducing food waste). All very important topics, to be sure.
The last 1/3rd is supposedly about creating your smart garden but each chapter is only a couple of pages and feels very light on information. Yes, all the elements are important (for most gardens actually) but I read a few times that essentially you could look elsewhere for more detailed information.
I have very little experience in growing in a greenhouse 'style' garden (though mine is enclosed due to wildlife) so I picked up a couple of tips (such as the removal of panels for ventilation) though I think the construction would need to be modified for warmer locations (their farm is in Tasmania).
Things such as irrigation (for example) didn't list what they actually use, how it was constructed. It felt like it was more "install irrigation, with a solar pump so you don't need to worry about watering", which makes sense but ... Details? The practical aspects were missing.
I think the first sections were really well researched but when it came to the actual garden element I was left wanting more. Could someone follow this book and create their own smart garden? I don't believe so. They would still need to do alot of research to make it work, or already have a solid knowledge base. That's not to say there aren't positive elements in this book but it isn't what I thought it would be.