Adrian Higgins
Adrian Higgins
Columnist

A plan to renew the National Arboretum

(Matt McClain/ For The Washington Post ) - In the shadow of the National Capitol Columns garden at the National Arboretum, gardeners are seen last winter removing the old, dried growth of grasses and perennials to get the garden ready for spring. Later this winter, a strategic plan will be released to map a future for the cash-strapped arboretum in Northeast Washington.

(Matt McClain/ For The Washington Post ) - In the shadow of the National Capitol Columns garden at the National Arboretum, gardeners are seen last winter removing the old, dried growth of grasses and perennials to get the garden ready for spring. Later this winter, a strategic plan will be released to map a future for the cash-strapped arboretum in Northeast Washington.

When the U.S. National Arboretum’s handsome modernist administration building is reopened in time for spring, I hope the $9 million renovation will be symbolic of a larger renewal at the institution.

That’s also the keen desire of many others, including its director, Colien Hefferan, who is planning to unveil something even more vital to the arboretum when the first crocuses burst forth: a strategic plan for its future.

Adrian Higgins

Adrian Higgins has been writing about the intersection of gardening and life for more than 25 years, and joined the Post in 1994. He is the author of several books, including the Washington Post Garden Book and Chanticleer, a Pleasure Garden.

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(Adrian Higgins/The Washington Post) - The administration building and visitors center is set to open in late winter following a two-year, $9 million renovation.

The arboretum occupies one of the largest open spaces in the city — 446 acres between New York Avenue and the Anacostia River — and functions on many levels. It is the horticultural research arm of the Agricultural Research Service (part of the Agriculture Department), a leafy riverside park for residents and a place for garden lovers to commune with flora.

It is a priceless “green” asset in an area of the city that has often been neglected, and it is also one of the 10 most popular botanical parks in the United States. But it is also one afflicted in recent years by a chronic underfunding for staff, operations and maintenance, forcing supporters to go directly to Congress in search of budget add-ons. (The administration building renovation was funded by stimulus grants.)

In our age of deficits and political deadlock — the recent “fiscal cliff” deal notwithstanding — many government agencies have been patching what they do for years: The national park system is suffering from more than $10 billion worth of deferred maintenance, according to a 2011 report.

But for those of us who have seen the arboretum lurch from one money crisis to another for so long, the idea of a clearer path forward is surely welcome.

The problem came to a head in 2010 when the loss of a relatively small endowment forced managers to propose ripping out the arboretum’s popular azalea and boxwood collections to save money. The resulting furor predated Hefferan’s appointment, but it reinforced her desire to assemble a group of 12 experts in plant science and education (including Hefferan, the arboretum’s first female director) to find a plan.

In a draft that should be finalized in March, the panel has concluded that the arboretum needs to emphasize its least-understood function, as a laboratory where scientists develop better trees and shrubs. Hybridizers have sought to find woody plants that have a longer season of bloom, a showier berry, a more compact size for smaller gardens. They have also eyed the needs of the commercial grower, with plants that are easy to propagate and widely adaptable. They have also sought to breed against pests and disease — the arboretum has virtually reinvented the crape myrtle but did so largely to rid it of powdery mildew.

The ecological benefits of horticulture are now more pressing, and alluring, than ever. And the imperative today might be in breeding plants that can cope with more drought, more heat and fewer pesticides and at the same time not invade areas where they are not wanted.

In that sense, any reinforcement of its core scientific mission provides a golden opportunity for the arboretum in an age when plants are needed to shade and oxygenate the planet, cover green roofs, hold and filter storm water, and generally mitigate climate change.

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