ViolaGardens

ViolaGardens Jessica is likewise one of just a few fully licensed, bonded and female landscape contractor's in the state of California. In short, a garden is a place to BE.

Woman Owned and Run // Ecological Landscape Design // CA Licensed Landscape Contractor // Drought Tolerant // California Native // Lawn to Garden // Permaculture // Sustainable // Artistic Planters // Living Walls Jessica Viola is founder and owner of Viola Gardens Design, Viola Living Jewels and author of A Hundred Bells: Understanding Patterns in Nature on the Path to Empowerment. Jessica is one

of Southern California’s most sought after landscape designers, having spent the past two decades cultivating a design portfolio based on regenerative, whole-system solutions and artistic vision. Her in-house design crew is currently fully women led and all team members are certified in Permaculture Design. Jessica approaches each project as a unique reflection of her client’s dreams and desires in relationship with the needs of the garden, the architecture, and the land. Her career started in 1999, doing landscape construction and habitat restoration with the native plants of the San Francisco Bay Area. Jessica went on to receive her certification in Earth Architecture from the world-renowned Cal-Earth Institute, and her teacher-training certificate in Permaculture and Environmental Design from Earthflow and the Permaculture Institute in New Mexico. Jessica has taught permaculture at Santa Monica College and Pepperdine University, and hosted workshops throughout Southern California. Throughout the years she has cultivated a diverse portfolio of regenerative hardscape solutions; creative drought-tolerant and native plant palettes; hillside erosion control techniques; artistic botanic creations; edible garden designs; and a deep knowledge base in organic garden care and maintenance- all within her unique modern aesthetic. Viola Gardens employs a full range of hardscaping and softscaping techniques that range from poured in place pavers, patios, uniquely designed built-in structures such as fire-pits, water features and retaining walls, pergolas, decks and irrigation systems. With expert knowledge of plant systems and species, we employ a keen focus on the artistic placement and ecological use of wide array of site-appropriate plants in the landscape garden. We also employ natural building and hardscape techniques, using recycled and renewable resources as much as possible to minimize the carbon footprint of our projects. We encourage the use of grey water and drip irrigation systems, as well as solar lighting whenever possible. Most importantly, we believe that each garden is a unique expression of our clients and the land, and we strive to integrate and reflect the unique personalities of our clients, their dreams and desires, as well as the seamless flow between the needs of the garden and its relationship with both the architecture and the people. Rather than imposing design solutions, we believe in arriving at solutions that are integrative and holistic. We strive to find a balance between people and the landscapes in which they live, fostering deeper relationships and connections between both mother nature and human nature. ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP

“Viola Gardens was born out of a passionate and life-long love for nature, beauty and art. Inspired by the possibilities inherent when these elements come together in the garden, there is nothing more sublime, calming and heartening than watching and nurturing life as it grows. Employing the principles of environmental design, I approach each project with the intent of creating a space that uniquely suits the personality and lifestyles of my clients, exists in harmony with the architecture of the space, is ecologically responsible, restorative and functional, and ultimately creates the conditions for unfolding beauty, over and over, in time. In nature, the remedy always grows right next to the poison. By building functional connections in a diverse landscape, I can arrive at design solutions with clients that culminate in abundance and beauty.” - Jessica Viola

As permaculture designers, there are three commitments we make:

To care for the planet
To care for people
To extend all resources and energy towards those first two ends

To create a garden is to create a sanctuary, a place of rest and contemplation, a place of discovery and wild imagining, a place to cultivate relationships, a place to sing, a place to laugh, a place to cry, a place to feel the vesistitude of experience inherent in being alive. The wisdom of the garden is in that nothing exists inside a freeze frame - it is a constant and shifting, LIVING, piece of art - a place in space and a single moment in time. Each moment, each thought, each seed, each song creates the conditions for what will grow next. Dream. Dream Big. All dreams are possible.

06/23/2023
Come join our team! We are a small, boutique design-build firm looking for a junior design associate with creative impet...
06/01/2023

Come join our team! We are a small, boutique design-build firm looking for a junior design associate with creative impetus, a solid work ethos, a collaborative spirit, a passion for ecology, plants and design, an eagerness to learn and base design skills and experience to build upon 🔥��DM for more information on details of position or email resume and portfolios to [email protected]�🙌🏾 🎨🙌🏾��“There is a vitality, a life force, a quickening that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all time. This expression is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and be lost. The world will not have it.” - Martha Graham��

Being brave enough to try something new can open the door to personal growth.  We know that there are at least 60,000 di...
01/19/2023

Being brave enough to try something new can open the door to personal growth. We know that there are at least 60,000 distinct species of tree. Isn’t that amazing? This is because, over many thousands of years, they’ve adapted to the different situations they’ve found themselves in. Clever sycamores, for example, learned to turn their seeds into mini helicopters, so the wind carries the large seeds away from the shade of the parent tree without it needing to produce a fruit to be munched by birds and animals. Just remember, someone has to be brave enough to be the first to branch out.
-“How to be more Tree: Essential Life Lessons for Perennial Happiness” by Liz Marvin

This book, a gift from my closest gal on my birthday last year, now upon me yet again and just days away. Getting older is a great teacher. Learning to accept and be with the changes we go through, physically, emotionally, spiritually. Accepting the passage of time and watching our loved ones grow older alongside us is humbling. Knowing everything will follow it’s natural path and inherent design and that in the end, every day is precious. Not to be wasted. Ever more grateful for the practices that keep me in alignment with my highest and wisest self - my yoga practice, writing, community, gardening, designing, drawing - mothering, showing up for my (soon-to-be) husband, my parents, my sisters. I moved to California 25 years ago, like the little seedling helicopters, blowing in from NY and by the grace of god, found earth to grow roots, sky to rise high, courage to branch out and listen to the quiet voice in my heart that led me down the permaculture path to pursue a career as a garden artist and builder. Single mom, musician, poet and earth steward. Cheers to the brave hearted, cheers to the edge-thinkers, the out-of-the-box believers, the passionate and purposeful! To all my fellow aquarian odd balls.

Photo by my friend

Blue Notes 🎵 Texture, form and composition create an elegant and graceful winter garden while we await spring’s soon to ...
01/18/2023

Blue Notes 🎵 Texture, form and composition create an elegant and graceful winter garden while we await spring’s soon to follow blossoms and blooms. 💙🦋💙

Taking a moment to marvel at the majesty and power of the various ecological worlds that inhabit our one shared world. L...
01/10/2023

Taking a moment to marvel at the majesty and power of the various ecological worlds that inhabit our one shared world. Last night the wind ripped in topanga canyon, in the mountains by the sea. 10 inches of rain and some mother trees fell, homes flooded and boulders, mud and debris slid. Made me think about something I was asked years ago— “where are you in the water shed?”
What flows to you and what flows on from you? Where do you get your water? What can you store and reuse, what can you direct onward and to where? How can you support your patch of earth and capture what you need while maintaining balance?

Water, like energy, flows from one place to the next always creating conditions for the next thing to happen. Reflecting on the many ways water moves, in the deserts held as stored potential energy in cacti, as volcanic geysers creating alchemical beauty and moving from deep within molten cores and shooting high into atmosphere, in redwood forests creating conditions for towering growth and ecosystems hundreds of feet above our heads.

Still one of the most marvelous currents of energy is human life. Powered by water, our bodies are made up of 78% water. Add to this our ability to love and empathize and help /be a part of and build relationships.

What a world we live in.
Here’s to being a part of the solution and never losing our sense of wonder in a world of constant change.

One of my first projects I designed and built I. My early years in LA was this lovely hillside home for a friend of mine...
01/06/2023

One of my first projects I designed and built I. My early years in LA was this lovely hillside home for a friend of mine. She is an artist and the home, designed by the deeply talented Simon Storey from .architects , is an impeccable work of art itself. The impetus for the project came about because there was a mudslide from the house above this one that had slid into the property and demolished the home and landscape. I was young and green but had about a decade of planting and restoration experience under my belt. I knew that while some structural retaining was imperative that we could repair and regenerate the landscape with native plants, many of which have roots three times the size of the upper body. “Erosion control” is part of our natural landscape here in the west. The oak woodland habitat and coastal sage brush communities have kept the hillsides in place along the west coast for thousands of years, and do so because of the ecological balance that they share with the oak trees and the vast and diverse habitat of birds, pollinators, insects and mycelium. Together they create conditions for regeneration beneath the ground, in the soil, where the roots gow deep and strong and balanced.

At some point someone made a decision many years to impose landscape design solutions in garden design and move away from what nature has shown us for millennia - works! The rains we are experiencing in the west are intense, couple with years of drought, increases Santa Anna winds and fire, we can heed the guidance of natural systems and consider what’s possible in our own small patch of earth. This garden is entirely drought tolerant, pollinator friendly and still growing roots, 15 years later. 🌦️🌈🌳

Native and regenerative landscaping is revolution disguised as gardening.
Ringing in the new year with blessings for rain and gratitude to earth’s wisdom. Looking forward to making some amazing new gardens this year 🙏🏽

Stay close to anything that makes you feel alive- Hafiz Happy new year ✨Photo    is a                             Gratef...
01/02/2023

Stay close to anything that makes you feel alive- Hafiz

Happy new year ✨

Photo

is a

Grateful for these blessed rains, and for my daughter, my partner, my beloveds and the gift of life.
Wishing all my friends a peaceful start to a prosperous, healthy and inspired year ahead. X. Jessica

Let the light in ✨Happy solstice and blessings in the new year! Door design by the talented  at the beautiful Fryman Can...
12/21/2022

Let the light in ✨

Happy solstice and blessings in the new year!

Door design by the talented at the beautiful Fryman Canyon project featured on our site. Link in bio 🎄

Tessellation and shapes and textures I discovered on a quick trip to Valle de Guadalupe.                .wine
12/19/2022

Tessellation and shapes and textures I discovered on a quick trip to Valle de Guadalupe.



.wine

"Can you speak Bocce?""Of course I can, sir. It's like a second language to me…""Yeah, all right. Shut up.""Shutting up,...
12/15/2022

"Can you speak Bocce?"
"Of course I can, sir. It's like a second language to me…"
"Yeah, all right. Shut up."
"Shutting up, sir."
―Owen Lars and C-3PO[1]

In addition to being the interplanetary trade language in Star Wars, Bocce, originally documented in Egypt in 5200 B.C , spread throughout the Middle East and Asia, eventually adopted by the Greeks and found it’s way to Rome where it became what we know it to be today, the worlds 3rd most popular sport.

So much to learn about Bocce!

I remember loving to play this game with my Italian American family and now, love building these playful courts for our clients, surrounded by plants and garden spaces that inspire.

This one lives in Pasadena! Photographer

A place to gather and enjoy in a garden is a treasure. ♥️

Piano stairs 🎶 outdoor kitchens and hand prints over time. Post-Woolsey re-envisioned. 🌱 More time is needed for this fr...
12/13/2022

Piano stairs 🎶 outdoor kitchens and hand prints over time. Post-Woolsey re-envisioned. 🌱 More time is needed for this freshly-planted garden to grow in but with these blessed rains, spring is nearly guaranteed to blossom and bloom with wild discovery.

Funny side note on this project, this house also sat squarely in the line of the Woolsey fire in 2018 however there was a random boulder in a sea of apple sedum outside the former entrance that is where a large and flying ember landed, saving the structure. While there was still much to replace and revive, this house remained. Built in the 50s when point dune was a quieter place. The planting of this garden with over 3000 plants and ancient olives was an epic experience. The symphony of birds and dragonflies and butterflies and hummingbirds that came to the party when these plants went in the earth was truly spectacular. So excited to see this one unfurl.

Thanks to for saving these hand prints and to for helping me bring these musical stairs to life.

Hope your holidays are off to a lifted tune!

Address

Topanga, CA
90290

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

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