Penn
State Alumnus Oversees Grounds At Smithsonian Institute
When Jeff Nagle was a student in Penn
State's College of Agricultural Sciences, he used to dream up landscaping
plans for local homes and present them to homeowners as projects for
a landscape design class. Today, eight years later, he is no longer dreaming
up landscaping plans—he is turning them into reality, and supervising
their execution. Best of all, lots of visitors to one of the nation's
best-known attractions get to enjoy them.
His creative course in landscape
design taught him to envision what landscapes should look like, and
how to transform his plans from just good ideas
to real-world surroundings. But Nagle never dreamed that one day he
would get to make all of the major landscaping decisions at a museum
as large
as the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C.
Nagel, 30, of Arlington,
Va., is the Smithsonian's supervisory horticulturalist. His job requires
that he oversee the upkeep and maintenance of the gardens
and plants on Smithsonian museum grounds. He heads a staff of about
10 other horticulturalists, biological science technicians and volunteers.
"They work the grounds that surround the museums, and together,
we discuss the long-term plans for the Smithsonian landscape," Nagle
says. Nagle, who graduated from Penn State in 1998, and staff take care
of
seven different museum outdoor areas and three main specialty gardens
that are considered to be the most frequented outdoor museum spots around
the Smithsonian.
Nagle said that the Smithsonian's lavish
gardens are generally regarded as meeting spots or gathering places where
frequent
museum visitors like
to meet up with friends and colleagues, to take nature walks or simply
to sit and relax.
Nagle credits Penn State for having a renowned horticulture study program
that helped him land his job at the museum. "Penn State was one
of the few schools in the nation that had a horticulture major when I
was looking at colleges," he said.
While Nagle was a student, he
participated in the university's work-study program, in which he did
landscape work around the Agricultural Administration
Building on the University Park campus. During his summers off from
school, Nagle held prestigious internship positions, landscaping with
popular
commercial landscaping companies such as the Shearon Environmental
Design Company in Plymouth Meeting, Pa.
Nagle enjoyed his time in commercial
and residential landscaping but knew that he wanted to take on a more
interactive, nature-based approach
to landscaping. "When you work for a commercial landscaping company,
you go to the same worksite every day to complete your job on a certain
home," Nagle says. "But doing the landscape for the Smithsonian
is just a more satisfying, hands-on, long-term kind of activity."
Nagle
recalls that his landscape design class was his favorite at Penn State. "It
required a lot of creativity and a lot of drawing," Nagle
says. "We would go out to a house, draw-up a new landscape, and
present it to the homeowners there. It really prepared you in terms of
what it would be like to have clients."
One of the reasons Nagle
enjoys his current occupation so much is because landscaping the grounds
of one of the nation's largest and most celebrated
museums is like having the opportunity to create several grand artistic
masterpieces in nature. "People come from all over to tour the Smithsonian
gardens to take leisurely strolls through Smithsonian Parks and to picnic
among the beautiful fall foliage or the colorful scenery of the garden's
seasonal flowers," he says.
The best part about his job as supervisory
horticulturist, Nagle believes, is that he gets to see people enjoying
the grounds that he cares for,
firsthand, every day. "It's incredible, the number of people who
get genuine enjoyment out of the work I do," he says. "You
can see it in the way people remark about the different displays and
stop to smell the flowers."
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