Kids and adults climb over rocks and fallen tree trunks at Santa Barbara Botanic Garden's award-winning Backcountry area. A canopy of greenery surrounds them.
Santa Barbara Botanic Garden's award-winning Backcountry is a 4.5-acre garden that invites self-directed nature exploration for kids. Credit: Santa Barbara Botanic Garden

Santa Barbara Botanic Garden and BrightView Design Group have been recognized with an Honor Award from the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) Colorado Chapter for the design of Backcountry.

Backcountry is an innovative 4.5-acre garden that encourages self-directed, unstructured nature exploration for children.

The recognition is was one of only two Honor Awards given by the Colorado chapter of ASLA in 2023. It was given for “superior professional accomplishment in a site-specific work with a construction budget of over $500,000.”

The award was presented to Denver-based BrightView Design Group in August.

“This was a design-build project, so from the very beginning the design process was a partnership between BrightView and the garden,” said Steve Windhager, Botanic Garden executive director.

“Our goal was to create an area for the unstructured, child-determined experiences that are important for not only child development, but for building an appreciation of the natural world,” he said.

Backcountry opened in June 2022 after a two-year process and a $4 million budget, including a $2.5 million endowment to ensure staffing and upkeep in perpetuity.

It is designed for all visitors, but particularly ages five to 13, to pursue nature play – climb on fallen trees, rock-hop, build forts out of natural materials,and explore a variety of ecosystems including sunny meadows, shaded creek sides, wooded hills, and more.

At least 15 inches of fall-safe mulch is distributed to cushion beneath any climbing feature more than two-and-a-half-feet tall.

“Creating an escalating sense of immersion in nature, disrupting traditional use patterns, and incorporating multiple decision points for route and difficulty are key factors in the design of Backcountry Garden,” said Kurt Buxton, BrightView Design Group vice president.

“Children can choose the obvious path forward or explore routes threading through trees and undergrowth, balancing and hopping on fallen logs, scrambling across rocks or ducking under limbs to rejoin the adults.”

The design also included locations for five “Casitas,” temporary outdoor playhouses built of natural materials, which were selected through a design competition.

Children can pretend to be bees while crawling through a human-scaled pollinator home or climb to the Backcountry’s highest point to navigate rope bridges to enter the Raptor’s Perch.

Backcountry was completed thanks to contributions of founding donors. For a complete list, visit https://sbbotanicgarden.org/insight/thank-you-for-supporting-the-backcountry/.

For more about Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, visit www.SBBotanicGarden.org. Learn about BrightView Design Group at https://www.brightview.com/services/design. Visit ASLA at www.asla.org.