October 20, 2023 – David Malda spoke to the Garden Club of Greater Milwaukee about GGN’s work on the new Milwaukee Public Museum.
In his talk, Wisconsin Wonders: A Future Museum for Curious and Connected Communities, David shared the design and broader context for the garden at the new museum. This garden will be constructed on land that has been home to Indigenous peoples for thousands of years. In the 1800s, the area became a hay market where the agricultural transformation of the surrounding landscape fueled the brewing and other local industries. After years of redlining, the urban renewal program of the 1960s razed the surrounding African American neighborhood of Bronzeville and constructed a highway. This land has been shaped by these stories from the past and many more are still waiting to be told. They are all part of the ground.
The garden is envisioned as a place for fostering connections between this specific moment and the daily life of the neighborhood, school visits, citizen science, and other community and museum events. For some, it will be an introduction to Milwaukee and the neighborhood. For others, it will be a first-time experience with native plants close to home. The garden orients to adjacent housing and numerous community services. Planting strategies draw from restoration and early successional ecologies on this disturbed site. The hope is that kids will be offered a relationship with nature that is desperately needed for them at this time. While small in footprint, the lessons of these plants and the voices of community partners hosted here can have much greater impacts. A museum and a garden are both places to learn those lessons that challenge our understanding of the world around us, take them home, and use them to support broader change.
Past guest speakers for the Garden Club of Greater Milwaukee include Nancy Cody, GCGM president, certified floral designer, and owner of Rose and Twig Floral Design; Eric Manges, on-air meteorologist for FOX6 and weather expert; David Robson, chairperson for the National Garden Club PLANT AMERICA Community Grant; Elaine Zautke, manager at Lakeshore State Park; and James Steiner, designer of the oasis representing landscape architectural firm Helianthus.
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