Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences

 

Current Students

Horticulture Alumna Has Grown into Big National Job


Holly Shimizu can't remember what she thought she'd be doing 30 years after graduating from Penn State. But after a recent visit to the University, she realized she is doing what she hoped to all along: working with public horticulture.

 

Shimizu, a native of Philadelphia, is the executive director of the United States Botanic Garden in Washington, D.C., where she oversees garden development, finances, volunteer and education outreach, and designing new garden exhibits. Shimizu says her favorite part of the job is being creative and turning ideas into reality for the garden, and then seeing how the changes affect visitors.

 

"It doesn't feel like I am going to work," Shimizu says. "I am the luckiest person."

 

She says Penn State provided a strong foundation for her future in horticulture and showed her that horticulture is a science and an art. "Penn State revealed the whole world of horticulture to me," she adds.

 

Shimizu, who now is a resident of Glen Echo, Md., has traveled the world working in botanic gardens in England, Belgium, Germany, and Holland, and has studied horticulture in many schools. But Penn State was the best, Shimizu believes. "Penn State opened doors of opportunity and provided a strong foundation for my future in horticulture," she says.

Penn State University College of Agricultural Sciences .