TEAM

Man sitting in a lush forest, wearing a beige jacket, surrounded by green foliage.

Jonathan Hallet

Owner / Principal

Gardens? Well sure they’re fun to visit, but I will never have the admirable Boomer or British spirit to work hard on tending my garden. And that’s why I started a landscape architecture practice here: to design gardens that are manageable and that you love to be in.

Don’t mistake me for a pure utilitarian. It was also to make gardens in a fresh, youthful style. Vanity is at my core. One of my most devastating childhood moments was when my black and white tracksuit got coated in red, staining mud, when I slipped on a hike. I knew it would never be the same.

Despite not liking mud on my favorite outfits, I’m not just a designer, I pull weeds too. I spent about a year pulling a terrible tiny grass weed on a permaculture farm in Maui. Weeds and yoga, weeds and yoga. And putting tourists on our bicycle-powered smoothie blender at the farmstand. I understand the work that goes into building and maintaining a landscape.

I’ve worked in horticulture and landscape design for over 15 years. I studied landscape architecture at UC Berkeley and worked at Lutsko Associates (some of the best in landscape architecture). I’ve designed both NDA-flavor estates and cozy home gardens. UC Berkeley awarded me a fellowship to travel to significant botanic gardens worldwide, to investigate what these gardens can do to stay relevant (back to my point that gardens take too much work and need to do more). While at Lutsko Associates, I followed up on that interest, completing a 1.5 acre new garden in the San Francisco Botanic Garden (SFBG). This new garden hosts events to help raise funds for SFBG, which has a limited staff and required this new space to be equally beautiful and low-maintenance.

So, know that if I show up to a site visit wearing a nice outfit, and it’s winter, I’m risking for you the same mud devastation I experienced as a child. Especially if you have heavy clay soil. But it’s worth it to look my best while getting to learn about your relationship and history with your property, along with your hopes and dreams, and together we see what to change, throw-out and honor.

Chris Copeland

Landscape Designer

Chris’s work in landscape architecture sprouted from his art practice, where he uses sculpture and drawing to explore how ecological and industrial systems blur the boundaries of nature and culture. He loves bread, ants, bicycles, and making things. He has a Bachelor of Fine Art from the Carnegie Mellon School of Art and a Masters of Landscape Architecture from the University of Washington College of Built Environments.