海角社区

SAUSALITO TEAM WINS H脛AGEN-DAZS-UC DAVIS
HONEY BEE GARDEN DESIGN COMPETITION

It鈥檚 a honey of a garden, the judges unanimously agreed.

The Sausalito-based team created a series of interconnected gardens with such names as Honeycomb Hideout, Nectar Nook and Pollinator Patch to win the international bee-friendly garden design competition, a gift to the University of California, Davis, from the H盲agen-Dazs brand.

The design, created by landscape architects Donald Sibbett and Ann F. Baker, interpretative planner Jessica Brainard and exhibit designer Chika Kurotaki, will be brought to life this summer on a half-acre site at the Harry H. Laidlaw Jr. Honey Bee Research Facility at 海角社区.

Sibbett is a principal with the Sibbett Group, Brainard is an independent museum consultant, Baker is a senior landscape architect with RRM Design Group, and Kurotaki is an independent design consultant and an exhibit designer who works for RRM Design Group.

The winning design is posted on the 海角社区 Department of Entomology Web site at:

In December 2008, H盲agen-Dazs ice cream committed $125,000 to the 海角社区 Department of Entomology to establish the garden.

The key goals of the garden are to provide bees with a year-round food source, to raise public awareness about the plight of honey bees and to encourage visitors to plant bee-friendly gardens of their own.

鈥淲e鈥檒l not only be providing a pollen and nectar source for the millions of bees on campus, but we will also be demonstrating the beauty and value of pollinator gardens,鈥 said design competition coordinator Melissa 鈥淢issy鈥 Borel, program manager for 海角社区鈥 California Center for Urban Horticulture. 鈥淢y hope is that it will inspire everyone to plant for pollinators.鈥

鈥淭he winning design fits beautifully with the campus mission of education and outreach, and it will tremendously benefit our honeybees at Bee Biology,鈥 said Lynn Kimsey, professor and chair of the 海角社区 Department of Entomology and director of the Bohart Museum of Entomology. 鈥淭he garden will be a campus destination.鈥

Kimsey served as one of eight judges who unanimously selected the design from among 30 entries, submitted from as far away as England. The winning team will be honored at the garden dedication in October, where they will be presented with an engraved name plaque. They also will be given the sweet reward of free H盲agen-Dazs ice cream for a year.

The Sibbett Group design zeroed in on sustainability and visitor experience. The four interconnected gardens form the 鈥減hysical and interpretive framework for our honey bee haven design,鈥 the authors said. A series of trails connects the gardens, while trellises define the entryways and reinforce the passage to the next space.

鈥淚ncorporated into each of the four sections are gathering spaces that serve as orientation points for guided tours, facilitated programs and 鈥榗hat time鈥 with beekeepers and entomologists,鈥 the team explained. Identification labels will help visitors know more about the plants, or what they can plant in their own yards.

The design also includes a learning center building and paths labeled Orchard Alley, Save the Bee Sanctuary, Round Dance Circle and Waggle Dance Way.

The competition judges focused on diversity (the winning design has 40 different plants), bloom balance, vision, generational learning, cost feasibility and attention to detail. Judges also declared the Sibbett Group design 鈥渢he most river- or environmentally-friendly鈥 and noted that it was beautiful, functional and financially realistic.

Honey bees pollinate more than 100 different U.S. agricultural crops, valued at $15 billion. However, in recent years, the nation鈥檚 beekeepers have reported losing from one-third to all of their bees due to a mysterious phenomenon known as colony collapse disorder.

In response, the H盲agen-Dazs brand launched the "H盲agen-Dazs Loves Honey Bees" campaign in February 2008, committing a total $250,000 donation for bee research to 海角社区 and Pennsylvania State University, then added a second donation of $250,000 to the two universities in 2009. It also formed a scientific advisory Bee Board, created an educational Web site and introduced the new Vanilla Honey Bee ice cream flavor. H盲agen-Dazs estimates that bees are crucial to nearly 50 percent of its flavors.

During the last several months, the public donated more than $30,000 to support additional honey bee research at 海角社区. In addition, a number of other companies have launched programs to donate a portion of their proceeds to 海角社区 honey bee research.

Media Resources

Pat Bailey, Research news (emphasis: agricultural and nutritional sciences, and veterinary medicine), 530-219-9640, pjbailey@ucdavis.edu

Diane McIntyre, H脙陇agen-Dazs, (510) 601-4338, Diane.McIntyre@dreyers.com

Rita Gorenberg, Ketchum public relations, (415) 984-6228, rita.gorenberg@ketchum.com

Kathy Keatley Garvey, 海角社区 Department of Entomology, 530-754-6894, kegarvey@ucdavis.edu

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