Wildflower Center Named Texas State Botanic Garden & Arboretum
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center has received an honorary designation from the Texas Legislature as the state botanic garden and arboretum, recognizing the critical role the Wildflower Center plays in conserving the native plants and landscapes of Texas.
The designation comes from House Bill 394, authored by Representative Donna Howard (D-Austin) and joint-authored by Representative Paul Workman (R-Austin) and Representative Roberto Alonzo (D-Dallas/Fort Worth). The bill was sponsored in the Senate by Senator Kirk Watson (D-Austin) and Senator Donna Campbell (R-New Braunfels).
“The Wildflower Center is an unparalleled resource in our state, providing conservation, education, and consulting programs to preserve and protect our environment,” said Gregory L. Fenves, president of the university. “We are deeply honored that the Texas Legislature has designated the center as the state botanic garden and arboretum of Texas.”
“The Wildflower Center is uniquely Texan, and I’m pleased the state has chosen to recognize it as such,” said Representative Howard. “Between its roots with Lady Bird Johnson, its unrivaled acres of native Texas flora and its forward-thinking collaboration with state agencies, the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center has surely earned this recognition. I hope this encourages all Texans to get outside and spend time with the beautiful and diverse landscapes at the Wildflower Center and learn about how they, too, can enjoy these plants and trees in their own communities.”
“This designation recognizes the Wildflower Center’s important contribution to the natural history of Texas,” said Senator Watson. “In the words of Lady Bird Johnson, ‘the environment is one thing all of us share’, and this well-deserved honor for the Wildflower Center will help us preserve and protect the native plants and landscapes for all Texans.”
No state funding accompanies the designation. The Wildflower Center remains a self-funded unit of UT Austin, with critical operating support coming from admissions, memberships, donations and other sources of earned revenue.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center is the largest all-native garden in the state, with 279 acres of gardens and natural areas that feature more than 800 native plant species from the mountains of West Texas to the Coastal Prairies. The center’s 16-acre Mollie Steves Zachry Texas Arboretum features native trees from across the state, including the progeny of historically significant live oak trees (the “Texas Hall of Heroes”).
“Botanic gardens such as ours play a critical role as hubs for plant conservation and environmental education and in developing innovative landscape practices,” said Patrick Newman, executive director of the Wildflower Center. “We are honored to receive this acknowledgment of our efforts to conserve Texas’ floristic heritage.”
Wildflower Center plant conservationists have collected and stored millions of seeds from Texas native plants for future restoration and research efforts. Center environmental designers have helped to create native landscapes across more than 90,000 acres in Texas and other states, from the George W. Bush Presidential Center in Dallas to the San Antonio Mission Reach Restoration and Dell Medical School. Wildflower Center experts also work closely with faculty and students in UTSOA's Landscape Architecture program, and helped design the Living Wall at Goldsmith Hall.
The center’s gardens and informal education programs provide environmental education to more than 140,000 guests and 10,000 Texas teachers and students annually. Its North American Native Plant Database is one of the most comprehensive in the U.S., providing in-depth plant information for more than one-third (8,000 species) of U.S. native plants.
Learn more and plan your visit at www.Wildflower.org.