The Santa Barbara Botanic Garden is a 78-acre botanical garden (32ha),[1] containing over 1,000 species of rare and indigenous plants.[2] It is located in Mission Canyon, Santa Barbara County, California, United States.
The purpose of the Garden is to display California native plants in natural settings. There are approximately 9.2km (5.7mi) of hiking trails within the garden. Mission Creek flows through the premises, and includes a rock dam which was constructed in 1806[1] by Native Americans (mainly Canaliños) under the direction of the Spanish padres of the adjacent Mission Santa Barbara.[3]
History
The Garden was founded in 1926 and designed by landscape architect Beatrix Farrand.[4] By 1936 its focus had narrowed to plants native to the California Floristic Province (which includes a bit of southwestern Oregon and part of Baja California, as well as most of the state of California). The Garden became a Santa Barbara County Historical Landmark in 1983 (the dam on Mission Creek was already designated as a State Historic Landmark).[5]
On May 6, 2009, part of the Botanic Garden was burned in the Jesusita Fire,[1] which burned much of the front country of the Santa Ynez Mountains behind Santa Barbara. While garden displays have recovered from the devastating effects of the fire, several buildings were destroyed.[6] One was the century-old Gane House, which contained the overstock for the garden library as well as many of the tools used for garden upkeep; the home of the garden's director; and a wooden deck overlooking the creek.[7] In June 2015, construction of the John C. Pritzlaff Conservation Center began at the site of the old Gane House– the Center opened in 2016.[8]