This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Why did you choose to study at Temple?
Before I came to Temple, I was doing horticulture and land-based work, which I loved dearly, but I was starting to feel as though there wasn’t much room for growth or upward mobility. I decided I should go back to school to study something horticulture-related with a background in design, so landscape architecture sounded like the move. Temple was perfect because its program is very horticulture and ecologically focused. I was looking at other schools too, but Temple’s program seemed the most down-to-earth, and I liked the designs I saw from Temple students - they just seemed the most realistic, cool, and in-touch.
What kind of work have you been doing as you pursue your degree at Temple?
For my capstone project, I am doing ecological restoration on a quarry near Newark. A quarry is basically a scarring of the earth – often when they are not in use anymore, they are simply abandoned, and they turn into unique ecosystems that you can’t find anywhere else. My work is basically a combination of guided human restoration and seeing what happens naturally as quarries revegetate.