Seattle Botanic Gardens (SBG) is conducting a nationwide search for its inaugural President & CEO to guide the integration of two closely aligned organizations, the University of Washington Botanic Garden (UWBG) and The Arboretum Foundation, into a single entity positioned to take full advantage of their extraordinary, shared resources. For the past 90 years, the Arboretum Foundation has stewarded the Washington Park Arboretum, both as a freely accessible public park and as one of the finest collections of woody plants in the world. For the past 50 years, the UWBG has managed that collection, conducted extensive botanical and environmental research, and provided myriad educational opportunities for toddlers, schoolchildren, and adults. Together, we will be a single institution of national significance; capable of nimbly furthering our mission and efficiently executing ambitious capital projects. Our new leader will need to be an inspirational builder, though the foundations are already firmly in place. The Seattle Botanic Gardens welcomes more than 600,000 visitors each year from across the region and around the world. Our sites include: The 230-acre Washington Park Arboretum whose collections include more than 40,000 plants from 107 countries The Center for Urban Horticulture with gardens, research facilities, and the Rare Care plant conservation program and seed vault. The 74-acre Union Bay Natural Area - the second largest natural system left on Lake Washington, and considered one of the best bird-watching sites in the city of Seattle. The Seattle Japanese Garden, a 3.5-acre traditional stroll garden A future 28-acre Montlake Peninsula site (coming in ~2031) The Arboretum Foundation and UW Botanic Gardens (UWBG) are joining forces to create one unified organization. This combination brings together: Public park spaces loved by local, regional, national, and international visitors World-class plant collections used for research and conservation Educational programs that connect thousands of people with nature each year Gardens that serve as outdoor classrooms and peaceful gathering places The new organization will manage public use and access, plant care, science education, and community programs across multiple sites. Once brought together as SBG, the new organization will have more resources, stronger programs, and greater impact than either organization could achieve alone. A major opportunity ahead is developing the Montlake Peninsula comprised of 28 acres that will return to the Arboretum in 2031. This once-in-a-generation project will require raising $100-$150 million and creating a new vision for how we welcome visitors and serve our community.
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Executive
Education Level
No Education Listed
Number of Employees
11-50 employees