Hosted by the ICAA Washington Mid Atlantic Chapter
Join the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art and for a tour of the gardens at Willow Hill. This modern English country house was built in 2020, designed by BarnesVanze Architects with landscape design by Jennifer Horn Landscape Architecture. Since then, the owners have added to the landscape and grounds including a chicken coop, barn for small farm animals greenhouse, garden shed and potager. Tour the recently completed-greenhouse gardens and grounds with landscape designer Jennifer Horn.
The gardener, Aerin Peak, will join the tour. Aerin is a certified vegetable garden coach who creates a vegetable garden plan suitable for the property owners.
Specific address will be sent prior to the event.
For more information, contact Gina Martin at [email protected].
In 1991 Jennifer Horn was hired for part time work at a plant nursery in Northern Virginia. Within months she became hooked, and decided to study horticulture at Virginia Tech and to then pursue a Masters in Landscape Architecture from University of Georgia. From 1999 until 2009 Jennifer practiced landscape architecture in New York City. Her professional experience included designing zoo exhibits for the Bronx Zoo; developing the ecological program for Fresh Kills Park on behalf of New York's Department of City Planning; and designing gardens, estates and parks for Edmund Hollander Landscape Architect and Deborah Nevins Associates. Jennifer is a regionally licensed landscape architect (Virginia, Maryland and Washington, DC) as well as in New York state. Since founding JHLA in 2009, Jennifer has continued to design luxury landscapes for residences, communities and resorts. Active projects involve constant collaboration with local architects and contractors for projects in DC and the surrounding municipalities. Other projects include school courtyard designs for communities in Ocean City, New Jersey and Queens, New York. JHLA has also provided strategic planning documents for communities both near and far (Fairfax, Virginia and Lanai, Hawaii) so that the landscapes respond to the existing ecological conditions as responsibly (and beautifully) as possible. In 2017, Washingtonian Magazine named Jennifer a “woman to watch”.